| Literature DB >> 26835441 |
Peter Zhukovsky1, Kai Ruggeri2, Eduardo Garcia-Garzon3, Sara Plakolm4, Elisa Haller5, Dafina Petrova6, Vaishali Mahalingam7, Igor G Menezes8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Increased access to transportation and information has led to the emergence of more diverse patient choice and new forms of health care consumption, such as medical travel. In order for health care providers to effectively attract patients, more knowledge is needed on the mechanisms underlying decision-making of potential travelers from different countries. A particularly promising method of studying the travelers' motives is collecting data on social media.Entities:
Keywords: cost; decision-making; destination; factors; medical travel; public health policy; quality
Year: 2016 PMID: 26835441 PMCID: PMC4724725 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2015.00284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Structure of the questionnaire scenarios. After stating their decision to travel for care, participants were asked to tick reasons relevant to their decision (in gradient).
Characteristics of study sample (.
| Variable | Value | Frequency % (absolute Nr) | Mean | SD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 67.8 (368) | |||
| Age | 27.6 | 10.36 | ||
| Medical travel experience | ||||
| Yes | 5.0 (27) | |||
| No | 95.0 (516) | |||
| Region of origin | ||||
| Europe | 87.7 (470) | |||
| Other | 12.3 (73) | |||
| Education | ||||
| Master degree, PhD or eq. | 43.6 (237) | |||
| Bachelor degree or eq. | 30.9 (168) | |||
| Secondary school | 19.0 (103) | |||
| Higher vocational training | 6.5 (35) | |||
| Income ( | ||||
| Very high | 1.7 (9) | |||
| Above average | 22.1 (120) | |||
| Average | 43.5 (236) | |||
| Low | 29.8 (162) | |||
| Below poverty | 2.8 (15) | |||
| Rating of local health care | ||||
| Quality | 3.7 | 0.98 | ||
| Waiting | 2.7 | 1.13 | ||
| Cost | 3.5 | 1.11 | ||
.
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Chi-square statistics for control variables.
| Variable | df | χ2 |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | 1 | 3.04 |
| Income | 4 | 11.12 |
| Education | 3 | 19.49 |
| Ratings of aspects of local health care | ||
| Cost | 4 | 8.65 |
| Quality | 4 | 41.24 |
| Waiting time | 4 | 20.04 |
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Frequency of deciding for or against medical travel and the odds ratios of traveling by reason and procedure.
| Across all scenarios | (%) | OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Choice to travel (circumstances not controlled) | 66.9 | ||
| By procedure | |||
| Hip replacement | 64.0 | Heart valve | 1.3 (1.1; 1.6) |
| Heart valve | 69.8 | Hip replacement | |
| By reason | |||
| Quality | 82.0 | Quality/waiting time | 2.6 (2.1; 3.3) |
| Waiting time | 63.5 | Quality/cost | 3.7 (3.0; 4.5) |
| Cost | 55.4 | Waiting time/cost | 1.4 (1.2; 1.6) |
Figure 2Odds ratios for Northern Europe (N. Europe), Southeast Asia (S. Asia), and Middle East (M. East) with 95% CIs. Non-significant ORs are not displayed.
Figure 3Choice to travel (Yes/No frequencies in percent of the total) to Southeast Asia by reason on the left .
Figure 4(A) Number of times a statement was indicated as important in deciding not to travel to Asia (maximum of 310 times possible). (B) Number of times a statement was indicated in response to “I would travel to Asia if …” (maximum of 310 possible).
Figure 5Yes/no frequencies (in percent of the total) across procedure and reason.