Risk Management and Healthcare Policy (Nov 2023)

On the Asymmetric Relationship Between Physician Mental Health Disorders on Quality of Healthcare Under the COVID-19 Pandemic in Taiwan: Quantile on Quantile Regression Analyses

  • Chen WY,
  • Lin FL

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 16
pp. 2291 – 2307

Abstract

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Wen-Yi Chen,1 Feng-Li Lin2 1Department of Senior Citizen Service Management, National Taichung University of Science and Technology, Taichung City, Taiwan; 2Department of Accounting, Chaoyang University of Technology, Taichung City, TaiwanCorrespondence: Feng-Li Lin, Department of Accounting, Chaoyang University of Technology, 168, Jifeng E. Road, Wufeng District, Taichung City, 41349, Taiwan, Tel +886 4 23323000 Ext 4580, Fax +886 4 23742359, Email [email protected]: When examining the nexus of physician mental health disorders and healthcare quality from the empirical perspective, mental health disorders are frequently associated with cyclical patterns corresponding to cyclic seasonality, mood swings, emission of air pollution and business cycles, the potential asymmetric effects of physician mental health disorders on healthcare quality have not received adequate attention from researchers. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to explore the asymmetric relationship between physician mental health disorders and healthcare quality during the pandemic outbreak in Taiwan.Methods: Daily data for care quality indicators and physician mental health disorders were collected from the National Insurance Research Database in Taiwan, and the quantile-on-quantile regression model was applied to proceed with our analyses.Results: Our results indicated that the overall aggregate effects of each quantile of physician mental health disorders on the cumulative quantiles of healthcare quality are negative (positive) for the 14-day readmission rate (preventable hospitalization rate and non-urgent ED-visit rate). Positively (negatively) cumulative effects of each quantile of physician mental health disorders were detected in the middle (low and high) quantiles of the preventable hospitalization rate. The cumulative effects of each quantile of physician mental health disorders on the high (low and middle) quantiles of the 14-day readmission rate are negative (positive), but the cumulative effects on various quantiles of the non-urgent ED-visit rate exhibit the opposite pattern.Conclusion: The observed variation in the relationship between physician mental health disorders and different quantiles of healthcare quality suggests the need for tailored strategic interventions based on distinct levels of healthcare quality when addressing the higher risk of physician mental health disorders during the pandemic outbreak conditions.Keywords: physician mental disorders, readmission rate, preventable hospitalization, non-urgent emergency department visits, social distancing, quantile on quantile

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