Back to Search Start Over

Using Conjoint Analysis to Investigate Hospital Directors' Preference in Adoption of an Evidence-based Intervention.

Authors :
Lin, Chunqing
Lin, Chunqing
Li, Li
Lee, Sung-Jae
Chen, Liang
Pan, Yunjiao
Guan, Jihui
Lin, Chunqing
Lin, Chunqing
Li, Li
Lee, Sung-Jae
Chen, Liang
Pan, Yunjiao
Guan, Jihui
Source :
International journal of healthcare management; vol 14, iss 2, 328-334; 2047-9700
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This study used conjoint analysis, a marketing research technique, to investigate hospital stakeholders' decision-making in adoption of evidence-based interventions (EBI). An efficacious hospital-based stigma-reduction intervention was used as a "product" to study adoption of EBI. Sixty hospital directors in Fujian, China evaluated the likelihood of adopting the EBI in their hospitals by rating across eight hypothetical scenarios with preferred and non-preferred levels of seven attributes, including 1) administrative support, 2) cost, 3) personnel involvement, 4) format, 5) duration, 6) technical support, and 7) priority alignment with the hospital. A hierarchical generalized linear model was fit to the likelihood of intervention adoption for the eight scenarios, with the seven attributes served as independent variables. Monetary cost of intervention implementation (impact score=2.12) had the greatest impact on the directors' reported likelihood of adopting the EBI, followed by duration of the intervention (impact score=0.88), availability of technical support (impact score=0.69), and flexibility of format (impact score=0.36). The impact scores of other attributes were not statistically significant. Conjoint analysis was feasible in modeling hospital directors' decision-making in adoption of EBI. The findings suggested the importance of considering cost, duration, technical support, and flexibility of format in development and dissemination of interventions in healthcare settings.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
International journal of healthcare management; vol 14, iss 2, 328-334; 2047-9700
Notes :
application/pdf, International journal of healthcare management vol 14, iss 2, 328-334 2047-9700
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391592997
Document Type :
Electronic Resource