Patient Preference and Adherence (Mar 2023)
Capturing What Matters with Patients’ Bypass Behavior? Evidence from a Cross-Sectional Study in China
Abstract
Wenwen Xie, Jiayuan Liu,* Yuankai Huang,* Xiaoyu Xi The Research Center of National Drug Policy & Ecosystem, China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing, People’s Republic of China*These authors contributed equally to this workCorrespondence: Xiaoyu Xi, Email [email protected]: In China, bypassing is becoming increasingly prevalent. Such behavior, as going directly to upper-level health-care facilities without a primary care provider (PCP) referral when facing non-critical diseases, contrasts to “expanding the role of PCPs as the first-contact of care”, may cause unneglectable damage to the healthcare system and people’s physical health.Objective: To examine the relationship between patient experience in primary health-care clinics (PHCs) and their bypass behavior.Methods: A cross-sectional study was designed for data collection. From July 2021 to August 2021, we conducted a questionnaire survey nationally. Fifty-three investigators were dispatched to 212 pre-chosen PHCs, around which 1060 interviewees were selected to gather information, using a convenience sampling. The primary independent variable was scores measured by Chinese Primary Care Assessment Tool (PCAT-C) to quantify patients’ experience at PHCs. The dependent variable was a binary variable measured by a self-developed instrument to identify whether participants actually practiced bypassing. Covariates were well-screened determinants of patients’ bypass behavior including socio-demographic factors, policy factors, and health-care suppliers. Binary logistic regression analysis was employed to evaluate the association of patients’ experience with their bypass behavior.Findings: A total of 928 qualified questionnaires were obtained. The first contact dimension (OR 0.961 [95% CI 0.934 to 0.988], P = 0.005) and continuity dimension (OR 1.034 [95% CI 1.000 to 1.068], P = 0.047) of patients’ experience were significantly associated with patients’ bypass behavior (P < 0.05). In addition, age (OR 1.072, [95% CI 1.015– 1.132], P = 0.013) and gender (OR 2.044, [95% CI 1.139– 3.670], P = 0.017) also made a statistically significant difference.Conclusion: Enhancement in patient experience at PHCs may help reduce their bypass behavior. Specifically, efforts are needed to improve primary care accessibility and utilization. The positive correlation between bypassing rates and continuity scores may require more attention on strengthening PCPs’ technical quality besides the quality of interpersonal interactions.Keywords: China, bypass behavior, patient experience, primary care, continuity