1. Factors associated with patients' choice of physician in the Korean population: Database analyses of a tertiary hospital
- Author
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Dong Hoon Suh, Soyeon Ahn, Kibeom Lee, Yong Beom Kim, Soo Young Yoo, Kidong Kim, Kyogu Lee, Banghyun Lee, and Jae Hong No
- Subjects
Male ,Health Screening ,Medical Doctors ,Health Care Providers ,Culture ,Orthopedic Surgery ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,computer.software_genre ,Choice Behavior ,Geographical locations ,Tertiary Care Centers ,0302 clinical medicine ,Older patients ,Sociology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Medicine ,Ethnicities ,Public and Occupational Health ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical Personnel ,Poisson Distribution ,lcsh:Science ,Generalized estimating equation ,Multidisciplinary ,Database ,030503 health policy & services ,Middle Aged ,University hospital ,Professions ,Korean People ,symbols ,Hospital Information Systems ,Female ,0305 other medical science ,Research Article ,Adult ,Asia ,Patients ,Surgical and Invasive Medical Procedures ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,Musculoskeletal System Procedures ,Physicians ,South Korea ,Republic of Korea ,Humans ,Poisson regression ,Aged ,business.industry ,Korean population ,lcsh:R ,Medical school ,Confidence interval ,Health Care ,Medical Education ,Relative risk ,People and Places ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,business ,computer ,Medical Humanities - Abstract
This study aimed to determine the factors influencing patients’ choice of physician at the first visit through database analysis of a tertiary hospital in South Korea. We collected data on the first treatments performed by physicians who had treated patients for at least 3 consecutive years over 10 years (from 2003 to 2012) from the database of Seoul National University’s affiliated tertiary hospital. Ultimately, we obtained data on 524,012 first treatments of 319,004 patients performed by 115 physicians. Variables including physicians’ age and medical school and patients’ age were evaluated as influencing factors for the number of first treatments performed by each physician in each year using a Poisson regression through generalized estimating equations with a log link. The number of first treatments decreased over the study period. Notably, the relative risk for first treatments was lower among older physicians than among younger physicians (relative risk 0.96; 95% confidence interval 0.95 to 0.98). Physicians graduating from Seoul National University (SNU) also had a higher risk for performing first treatments than did those not from SNU (relative risk 1.58; 95% confidence interval 1.18 to 2.10). Finally, relative risk was also higher among older patients than among younger patients (relative risk 1.03; 95% confidence interval 1.01 to 1.04). This study systematically demonstrated that physicians’ age, whether the physician graduated from the highest-quality university, and patients’ age all related to patients’ choice of physician at the first visit in a tertiary university hospital. These findings might be due to Korean cultural factors.
- Published
- 2018