| Literature DB >> 32075615 |
Stefanie Bühn1, Jakob Holstiege2, Dawid Pieper3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Distance to a hospital is an influencing factor for patients´ decision making when choosing a hospital for surgery. It is unclear whether patients prefer to travel further to regional instead of local hospitals if the risk associated with elective surgery is lower in the farther hospital. The aim of our systematic review was to investigate patient preferences for the location of care, taking into consideration surgical outcomes and hospital distance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32075615 PMCID: PMC7031936 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-8333-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flowchart
Characteristics of included studies
| Study/ Country | Scenario/ Method | Setting/Inclusion/Exclusion | Travel time to hospital |
|---|---|---|---|
- consecutive sample of a clinic’s inpatients and outpatients who were awaiting elective surgery - inability to discuss operative risk due to impairment of mental capacity or high preoperative anxiety | Local: not reported Regional: 4-h drive | ||
- patients with infra-renal, asymptomatic AAA (4–5 cm largest diameter) -living ≥1-h drive to hospital -patients not scheduled to undergo AAA surgery in the near future not reported | Local: 30 min’ drive Regional: 2-h drive | ||
Participants should imagine their children needed heart surgery. Afterward, parents should imagine having surgery and should make the decision for themselves) | - parents or adult primary caregivers of children referred to paediatric cardiology without upcoming surgery - determined cardiac abnormalities | Local: 10 min’ drive Regional: 1st scenario: 2-h drive 2nd scenario: 4-h drive | |
- patients with suspected ovarian neoplasm - cancer diagnosis | DCE 1: Local: distance that participants travelled to reach the clinic Regional: additional 50 miles DCE 2: Distances between hospitals ranged from 0 miles (hospitals were equidistant from the participant’s home) to 250 miles in nine increments | ||
- age 50–69 years - ability to understand the language and the DCE | Local: 15 min’ drive Regional: 90 min’ drive |
Results of choice experiments
| Study (number of patients) | Outcome risk in local hospital | Outcome in regional hospital | Proportions of participants remaining for surgery in local hospital N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Finlayson ( | 3% | 3% | 100 (100%) |
| 6% | 3% | 45 (45%) | |
| 12% | 3% | 23 (23%) | |
| 18% | 3% | 18 (18%) | |
| 23% | 3% | 17 (17%) | |
| 100% | 3% | 10 (10%) | |
| Landau ( | 2% | 2% | 40 (60% b) |
| 3% | 2% | 6 (9%) | |
| 4% | 2% | 5 (7.5%) | |
| 9% | 2% | 2 (3%) | |
| 32% | 2% | 1 (1.5%) | |
| Chang† ( | 3% | 3% | 85 (82.5%) |
| Scenario 1 | 4% | 3% | 38 (36.9%) |
| 6% | 3% | 20 (19.4%) | |
| 18% | 3% | 10 (9.7%) | |
| Scenario 2 | 3% | 3% | 85 (82.5%) |
| 4% | 3% | 50 (48.5%) | |
| 6% | 3% | 23 (22.3%) | |
| 18% | 3% | 11 (10.7%) | |
| Shalowitz†† ( | 34% | 34% | 42 (68%) |
| 34% | 36% | 18 (29%) | |
| 34% | 38% | 13 (21%) | |
| 34% | 40% | 12 (19%) | |
| 34% | 42% | 7 (11%) | |
| 34% | 44% | 6 (10%) | |
| 34% | 46% | 2 (3%) | |
| 34% | 48% | 2 (3%) | |
| 34% | 50% | 2 (3%) | |
| 34% | 52% | 2 (3%) | |
| 34% | 54% | 2 (3%) | |
| Burkamp ( | 1% | 1% | 178 (99%) |
| 1% | 0,8% | 92 (51%) | |
| 1% | 0,6% | 51 (28%) | |
| 1% | 0,4% | 35 (19%) | |
| 1% | 0,2% | 25 (14%) | |
| 1% | 0% | 11 (6%) | |
| Burkamp ( | 10% | 10% | 180 (100%) |
| 10% | 8% | 67 (37%) | |
| 10% | 6% | 25 (14%) | |
| 10% | 4% | 15 (8%) | |
| 10% | 2% | 10 (6%) | |
| 10% | 0% | 6 (3%) | |
aIn original study, there were differences in presentation of the results in figures and tables; we refer to the results presented in the result section of the study
bSixty-one participants who were not accepting any additional risk and number of participants accepting additional risk to keep surgery locally (number calculated)
† Only numbers of the decision of parents for their child’s surgery reported in the original study
††Only DCE1 displayed
Risk of bias
| Finlayson | Landau | Chang | Shalowitz | Burkamp | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | PN | N | PY | PY | |
| Risk of bias in domain 1 | critical | serious | critical | moderate | moderate |
| PN | PN | PN | PN | PN | |
| PY | PY | PY | PY | PY | |
| PN | PN | PN | Y | Y | |
| The investigators did not formally test the understanding, but there was evidence suggesting inadequate understanding. | The investigators did not formally test the understanding, but there was evidence suggesting inadequate understanding. | The investigators did not formally test the understanding, but there was evidence suggesting inadequate understanding. | The investigators did not formally test the understanding, but there was evidence suggesting adequate understanding. | The investigator tested the understanding and understanding was adequate | |
| Risk of bias in domain 2 | serious | serious | serious | moderate | moderate |
| PY | PY | PY | PY | PY | |
| Risk of bias in domain 3 | moderate | moderate | moderate | moderate | moderate |
| serious | serious | serious | moderate | moderate | |
Modification of Zhang, Y., et al., GRADE Guidelines: 19. Assessing the certainty of evidence in the importance of outcomes or values and preferences -- Risk of bias and indirectness. J Clin Epidemiol, 2018 [10].
aRoB rated for outcomes mortality risk, revision and survival; N No, PN probably no, PY probably yes, Y Yes