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Outpatient Satisfaction at Private General Hospitals in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

  • 투고 : 2020.05.13
  • 심사 : 2020.06.10
  • 발행 : 2020.07.30

초록

The quality of hospital services remains a concern of both the manager and the patient. The study aims to identify factors affecting outpatient satisfaction at private general hospitals in Ho Chi Minh City, establishing a scale for measuring them. Some 450 outpatients who were treated in five top private hospitals in Ho Chi Minh city (HCMC) in 2019 - An Sinh General Hospital, Hoan My General Hospital, Columbia Asia International Hospital, FV Hospital, and Vu Anh International General Hospital - were interviewed directly in the last quarter of 2019 to obtain the information. The SERVPERF model, plus the cost, together with the SPSS software, have been used to process information by Cronbach's alpha analysis, Exploratory Factor analysis, and linear regression analysis. The results show that there are five factors influencing outpatient satisfaction at private general hospitals in HCMC, in which four factors affects positively in the order of decreasing importance: treatment outcome, doctors and nurses' professional capacity, facilities and environment of the hospital, hospital care, and the treatment time factor affects negatively. The results of the study provide private hospital in HCMC managers with a number of suggestions to increase the level of hospital service quality, so that increase outpatients satisfaction.

키워드

1. Introduction

Many studies have shown that satisfaction of service recipients is a good condition for maintaining a long-term relationship with a service provider (Cronin, Brady, & Hult, 2000; Choi, Cho, Lee, Lee, & Kim, 2004; Anderson, Fornell, & Lehmann, 2004; Sweeney, Dagger, & Johnson, 2007). On the medical side, the World Health Organization (WHO, 2000) states that patients who are satisfied will cooperate more closely to monitor and implement regimens. Over the past decade in Vietnam, research on patient satisfaction has been rare; hospital managers often rely on experience to make decisions that improve patient satisfaction.

Since the mid-1990s, the Government has advocated  for the socialization of healthcare in order to mobilize many resources of society to invest in the field of people’s healthcare. Private hospitals are established and are defined as a conditional business establishment set up under the Enterprise Law, and must comply with the Ordinance on Private Medical Practice and Health Act. At the end of 2019, Vietnam has 248 private hospitals (out of 1,365 in total, not accounted hospitals under the Department of Defense management) with 21,048 clinics all over 63 provinces and big cities (Vietnam+, 2020).

HCMC has many medical facilities with diversified operations; the city health sector not only serves the people in the area, but also serves the people in the southern provinces, and people from nearby countries such as Laos and Cambodia. HCMC has 128 hospitals, accounting for 9.38% of the whole country, of which 82 public hospitals including general and specialized hospitals, accounting for 64.1% and 46 private hospitals, accounting for 35.9% (Department of Health HCMC, 2020a). Many hospitals in the city are large-scale with modern medical equipment, a team of doctors, specialized in modern techniques to bring high results in medical examination. Therefore, hospitals in the city always attract patients from all southern provinces. In the general condition of the health sector, some of the city’s public hospitals continue to suffer from overcrowding, so that private hospitals grow their own markets in recent years.

At the end of 2019, especially the 11th and 12th of December, Department of Health HCMC conduct a survey through 110 hospitals in HCMC to analyze the service quality of the hospitals in HCMC by the determinants developed by Department of Health years before (Department of Health HCMC, 2020b). The result was helpful to the hospitals management; however, the nature of the survey and analysis is from the management side, so there is still a need for a deep analysis from the patient side, especially for the private hospitals in HCMC, so this research does that.

2. Literature Review

2.1. Quality Service and Customer Satisfaction

Many scholars paid attention to services in general and service quality in particular. Quality of service, as a concept, raises a high interest of scientists and researchers, as the quality of service is not only difficult to define, but to measure as well (Zeithaml & Bitner, 2000; Parasuraman, Zeithaml & Berry, 1985, 1988, 1994; Gronroos, 1984; Giao, Hang, Phuong, Vuong, Tuan, Vinh, & Tu, 2020; Giao, Hoai & Vinh, 2019; Giao, 2004, 2018b, 2019; Oliver, 1981). The main definitions of quality of service focus on the fact that the service has to meet the customer’s needs and expectations (Liu & Xie, 2013; Breja, Banwet, & Iyer, 2011) and is interpreted as a difference of terms of service provision and customers’ expectations of perceived service. If the customer’s expectations are higher than the result of the service process, then customer perceived service quality is not satisfactory (Huang, Wang, & Xue, 2012). Most of the research is about personal services (Vuong & Giao, 2019; Giao & Ai, 2012; Giao & Lien, 2018; Giao & Mo, 2018; Giao, Vuong, Huan, Tushar & Quan, 2020; Giao, 2017; Giao, Vuong & Quan, 2018; Giao, Duong & Tu, 2018; Giao, Hoang & Vinh, 2018), not so much research is about business services (Giao, Trung & Truong, 2019; Giao, 2018a, Bartels, Giao & Ohlenburg, 2006).

Zeithaml and Bitner (1996) defined services as behaviors, processes, and ways of working to create value for customers. Thus, the service has features that distinguish it from tangible products. Kotler and Armstrong (2004) argued that services are activities or benefits that businesses can offer to customers to establish, strengthen and extend long-term relationships and partnerships with customers. Services characteristics are intangibility, heterogeneity/variability, perishability, and inseparability. There are different views on the quality of service, but the service is dedicated to customer service, so the quality of service viewed from the perspective of customers is very interested by business managers and researchers. Gronroos (1984) identified three components - technical, functional and reputational quality. Functional quality is considered as the process of service and technical quality is considered to be the result of the service. Gronroos (1998) explained customer expectation as a promise from the market, company image, word of mouth, and customer demand. The most common service quality measurement tool, SERVQUAL, was introduced by Parasuraman, Zeithaml, and Berry (1985) and revised in 1988. SERVQUAL is based on the distance between Perceived quality of service (P) and Expected quality of service (E), service quality (Q) is calculated as the difference between P and E (Q = P – E). SERVQUAL service quality model and scale (Parasuraman et al, 1988) have been used to measure service quality in many different areas such as dental (Carman, 1990), hospital (Babakus & Mangold, 1992), higher education (McElwee & Redman, 1993), auditing services (Freeman & Dart, 1993), architectural services (Baker & Lamb, 1993), banking services (Spreng & Singh, 1993).

Many researchers cited one of the definitions of customer satisfaction as Oliver’s definition (1981): satisfaction is the result of an emotional state, which reflects the expectations satisfied through the consumer experience that consumers feel. According to Kotler and Amstrong (2004), satisfaction is the level of a person’s sense that results from comparing the results obtained from the product when compared to his or her expectations. In addition to service-quality research from customer perception, customer satisfaction measurement has been debated over many decades. In their study of service quality, Parasuraman et al. (1985, 1988) measured customer satisfaction, but the prefixes of satisfaction were not specified. Dabholkar (1995) found in empirical studies that satisfaction and quality of service are two distinct constructs in a short period of time, but there is a convergence of satisfaction and quality of service when consumers regularly use the service for a long time.

Cronin and Taylor (1992) conducted empirical research and found that perceived quality leads to satisfaction. Zeithaml, Berry, & Parasuraman (1993) explained:  “Satisfaction is the difference that comes from the evaluation of service quality.” Teas (1993) argued based on the concept that satisfaction is a function of service quality, which derives from customer perception on a particular transaction. From this important observation, Parasuraman et al (1994) developed two structures of satisfaction in both contexts: (1) in a particular transaction and (2) in all transactions. Satisfaction in a particular transaction means satisfaction “here and now” (Gronroos, 1998), while the satisfaction in all transactions is derived from the accumulation of each transaction through time. Parasuraman et al. (1994) added in the model two more factors affecting satisfaction: product quality and price. At the same time, Parasuraman et al (1994) exemplified the customer satisfaction model for a company through the accumulation of numerous transactions.

2.2. Health Care Services and Patient Satisfaction

Health care is essentially a service, so service quality and customer satisfaction theories can be applied to the healthcare field. The medical environment is influenced by the law of supply and demand as well as the regulation of the state, and is always dominated by traditional values. There are two types of services: inpatient and outpatient. It depends on the target and the research target for which the scope of the service is focused on the care process or outcome, or both. Various studies have shown that the components of the quality scale of health care are a combination of SERVQUAL models (Parasuraman et al., 1985, 1988) and Gronroos (1983).

Factors affecting patient satisfaction from research findings by marketing researchers and medical literature are also consistent with the satisfaction model of Parasuraman et al. (1994) and Zeithaml et al. (1996), including: quality of service, cost, personal factors and situational factors in which quality has the most significant impact. Andaleeb, Siddiqui, and Khandakar (2007) put the hypotheses from each attribute of the quality of treatment directly influencing the satisfaction of the patient and the researchers have found some meaningful models. Currently, many studies were conducted in health care services (Choe et al., 2012, Hau et al., 2016, Ranjbar et al., 2012, Solayappan et al., 2011, Meesala & Paul, 2018, James et al., 2017, Vogus & McClelland, 2016, Mitropoulos, 2018), remarkably Lee (2017) suggested HEALTHQUAL model consisting of five components: empathy, tangibles, safety, efficiency, and degree of improvements of care service.

From these theoretical outlines, the theoretical model of outpatient satisfaction is shown in Figure 1. The objective of this study is not to measure high or low quality, high cost or low cost, but to focus on the causal relationship between factors and outpatient satisfaction. Thus, based on the view of Cronin and Taylor (1992), Teas (1993) and Zeithaml et al.(1993), the expectation is not measured, but only measured the patient’s perception through a specific treatment. And in the manner of Andaleeb et al. (2001, 2007), the elements of the quality scale are directly linked to satisfaction.

OTGHEU_2020_v7n7_323_f0001.png 이미지

Figure 1: Suggested study model

3. Methodology

By interviewing 10 outpatients with nine in-depth interview questions and a number of flexible questions in each case, the outpatients’ opinions were very useful. Through interviews, highlighting the details that every outpatient is concerned about is the role of the doctors during outpatient visits and treatment. Through in-depth interviews, the “results” component satisfies the outpatient’s desire not merely to improve the health status of an outpatient after treatment, but also to determine the outcome of medical examination. In addition, the time of medical examination is an important factor; the length of medical treatment has a negative impact on the psychology of outpatients. Thus, together with components such as reliability, empathy, tangibles, responsiveness, service capabilities, and medical cost, this study proposes a “treatment outcome” and “treatment time” into the suggested model of outpatient satisfaction (Figure 1).

This research was conducted to identify factors affecting outpatient satisfaction of the service quality at private hospitals in HCMC. A total of 450 outpatients who were treated in five top private hospitals in HCMC — An Sinh General Hospital, Hoan My General Hospital, Columbia Asia International Hospital, FV Hospital, and Vu Anh International General Hospital — were interviewed directly in the last quarter of 2019. The SERVPERF model, together with a combination of quantitative and qualitative research, has been used to process information. Stratified sampling was chosen, and the respondents are the outpatients who are treated at least once at the hospitals. The expected results are to measure the impact of the factors to outpatient satisfaction of the service quality of the hospitals in HCMC. In turn, these factors become the basis for suggestions to improve the outpatient satisfaction.

4. Research Results

4.1. Sample Description

Samples obtained meet the sampling requirements using a stratified sampling method based on the hospitals and diseases. The survey was conducted in the last quarter of 2019; the interviews were conducted directly to the outpatients who are waiting time for treatment at the hospitals. The characteristics of 450 observation samples are shown in Tables 1.

Table 1: General information about the sample

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 4.2. Evaluation of the Scale by Cronbach’s Alpha

In the full sample with n = 450, nine scales have a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.7 and the item — total correlations are greater than 0.3 (Table 2). Thus, the scales are reliable and all the observational variables are further used in the exploratory factor analysis.

Table 2: Cronbach’s alpha of the scales

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4.3. Exploratory Factor Analysis - EFA

The coefficient KMO = 0.912 and Bartlett’s test for significance less than 0.01, which is necessary and sufficient to analyze the exploratory factor. The factor analysis on the sample n = 450 with the principal component extraction method and the perpendicular rotation resulted in seven factors being extracted and each component factor had a higher factor loadings of 0.5 (Table 3). Of the seven factors, four factors are unchanged: tangible means, treatment outcome, treatment time and treatment cost. The components of the three factors: “responsiveness”, “empathy” and “service capabilities” have been rearranged to form Factor 2 and Factor 4. All seven factors have Eigenvalues, which are greater than 1 and a total variance of 68.8%, both of which meet the requirement for factor analysis (Giao & Vuong, 2019). New factors were recalculated using Cronbach’s alpha, and all factors have Cronbach’s alpha greater than 0.7.

Table 3: Exploratory Factor Analysis

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In order to carry out the regression analysis, components were renamed to fit the elements in each factor, and the research model was modified with new names or new factors in place of an original element.

Factor 1: Facilities and hospital environment, notated as TAN

1. The appearance of the hospital looks very beautiful

2. The staff’s clothes are neat and clean

3. Hospitals are always clean and neat

4. Patients easily find the office room such as: doctor room, laboratory room, x-ray room, ultrasound room,…

5. The hospital seems to have modern medical equipment

6. Waiting room for medical examination and waiting for medicine are always fresh

Factor 2: Doctors and nurses’ professional capacity, notated as PRO

1. The doctor examines the patient very carefully (eg, examining, observing, listening to the heart, and examining others for a diagnosis ...)

2. The doctor consults the patient before appointing the test, x-ray, ultrasound, minor surgery. . .

3. Doctors seem to have a lot of experience.

4. The doctor clearly answers the patient’s questions about the condition.

5. The doctor clearly explains the result of the examination, treatment and return.

6. Doctors are concerned about what the patient is most worried about

7. Nursing counseling for patients with peace of mind before taking blood test, x-ray, ultrasound, minor surgery. . .

8. Nurses are well versed in performing medical procedures.

Factor 3: Treatment outcome, notated as OUT

1. The patient’s health has improved over the course of the treatment.

2. Patient trust the medical profession will bring high efficiency

3. Patients trust the hospital’s medical machinery for accurate results

4. Patients believe the hospital has brought the best treatment outcome

Factor 4: Hospital care, notated as CARE

1. When the patient needs, the hospital staff are available to help

2. The hospital staff are happy to guide patients on where to go and what to do

3. Simple and accurate administrative procedures (checkin, bill payment)

4. Hospital staff treats patients very well.

5. Patients feel secure when communicating with hospital staff.

Factor 5: Treatment time, notated as TIME

1. Patients have to wait too long at some stages of the hospital (eg, registration of the examination, waiting for the doctor to wait for the results of the test)

2. The communication time between the doctor and the patient is too small

3. Patients spend too much time for a medical examination

Factor 6: Patients’ reliability on the hospital, notated as REL

1. The hospital ensures the patient’s privacy (eg, confidential clinics, medical information exchanged with the physician)

2. The hospital always performs tasks on time

3. The file is free of errors (for example: medical records, results card, prescriptions, invoices)

Factor 7: Cost of treatment, notated as COST

1. The cost of medical treatment exceeds the cost that the patient can pay.

2. The cost of medical examination and treatment is higher than the patient’s estimated cost.

3. The cost of medical examination and treatment at hospitals is reasonable.

EFA of the dependent variable group showed that KMO and Bartlett’s in the analysis of factors have sig. = 0.000 and KMO = 0.801 > 0.5; The Eigenvalue value is 2.942 > 1. Therefore, the extracted scales are acceptable. All four observed variables have factor loadings, which are greater than 0,5. Thus, the scale satisfies the convergence value and reliability (Giao & Vuong, 2019), and was described in Table 4.

Table 4: EFA results of the service quality satisfaction scale

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4.4. Correlation Analysis

Table 5 shows that, with the exception of the cost variable (COST), the variables in the regression model are significantly correlated at less than 0.05. Correlation coefficient between variables is less than 0.85, it can be said that the independent variables in the model guarantee distinct values.

Table 5: Correlation matrix

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** Spearman’s correlation was statistically significant at 0.01 (2-tailed)

* Spearman’s correlation was statistically significant at 0.05 (2-tailed)

4.5. Linear Regression Analysis

The linear regression model followed the Enter method, the dependent variable was satisfaction and the six independent variables. The REL was not statistically significant (Sig = 0.253). The final linear regression model (Table 6) has a value of F = 165.7, corresponding to a significance level less than 0.001. Independent variables are less than 0.01 and all have a partial correlation with the dependent variable. This model accounts for 65.9% of the variance of the dependent variable due to the effect of the five independent variables.

Table 6: Regression model with full sample

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Unstandardized regression equation is as follows:

SAT = -0.231 + 0,209 * TAN + 0,209 * PRO + 0,297 * OUT + 0,346 * CARE – 0,093 * TIME

From standardized regression model, it is found that factors affecting outpatient satisfaction are in reducing importance order: treatment outcome (β = 0.315), doctors and nurses’ professional capacity (β = 0.269), hospital facilities and environment (β = 0.196), hospital care β = (0.178), and treatment time (β = -0.093). The results of this study have similarities with the results of some studies in Asian countries (Linh et al, 2002, Choi et al., 2004, Andeleeb et al., 2007, Ranjbar et al., 2012), such as: (1) tangibles, (2) service of doctors, (3) service of other employees. The treatment cost has an impact on the satisfaction of the inpatients of public hospitals in Bangladesh. In HCMC, outpatient treatment cost has no impact on satisfaction with hospitals in general and public and private hospitals in particular.

One particular problem in this study is that the “treatment outcome” appears most important. This is a different result compared to previous studies, particularly the satisfaction of outpatient study in Korea that primarily measures the functional factors of the service. The “outcome” scale of Sweeney et al (2007) has six components, of which only one is retained in this study. “Patients believe the hospital has brought the best treatment outcome”. Unlike the study by Sweeney et al (2007), the “treatment outcome” factor is the most important factor in the model. The finding about “treatment time” at general hospitals in HCMC is consistent with the results of the study by Linh, Le, Empereur, & Briancon (2002), a time-consuming medical examination that has a negative impact on patient satisfaction, which has long been presented and so far has not been overcome.

4.6. Difference Testing

The purpose of this analysis is to find differences in the quality of service assessment by factors such as gender, age, academic level, income and occupation. In this section, ANOVA and T-test are used to find differences in characteristics of respondents versus the satisfaction of quality of service. The results show that there is a difference in the quality of private general hospitals in HCMC services by gender — women, especially are more satisfied with the quality of service at Tiki.vn than men. There is a difference in satisfaction with the quality of private general hospitals in HCMC services by age. We found that, at the age of 50 to less than 60, service quality satisfaction was highest, followed by the over 60 age group, 40 to less than 50 group, 30 to less than 40 group, 20 to less than 30 group. There is a difference in the satisfaction of service quality by income. We found that at a salary of from VND40 million up, the satisfaction of service quality was highest, followed by the decreasing income, and the group of no income has the lowest satisfaction of service quality. We also found that there is no difference in the satisfaction of service quality by educational level, by occupation, and between group of oupatients who were treated with and without health insurance (Giao & Vuong, 2019).

5. Conclusion and Management Suggestions

5.1. Management Suggestions

In the trend of health socialization, the health care environment has changed, the administrators are under more pressure, the activists have to bring about the result which is not only professionally effective, but also financially effective and brand value. This research helps private hospital managers better understand the client’s perspective and provides some tools to improve patient satisfaction with the hospital.

Firstly, this study shows that the treatment outcomes are the most important factor affecting outpatient satisfaction. This depends on the technical team, the technical means and the operation of the professional processes. In fact, there is no significant difference in outcomes between outpatient clinics in general-sized hospitals. Cured illness is the desire derived from human instinct, which does not change over time, and is also the primary goal of every hospital. Therefore, improving outpatient treatment outcomes is a must, but it is not a long-term competitive advantage between general hospitals. Strategically, private hospitals need to create a sense of satisfaction that is appreciated by patients and the community, thereby building a lasting relationship with the community.

Secondly, on the “doctors and nurses’ professional capacity”, this factor is formed by two groups: (1) professional competence, (2) communication capacity. The traditional view is often concerned only with the first group, so many of the patients’ opinions reflecting on the attitudes of health care workers remain. Professional competence can be considered as a technical competence, while the basis of communicative competence is the attentive and sincere attention of the physician and the nurse to the patient, and soft skills are extremely important to increase patient satisfaction, thereby attracting customers to choose hospitals for health care. Therefore, the private hospital needs to have a reasonable staffing policy and ensure consistent and appropriate implementation of the policy, which requires time, cost, consensus in the organization, and the heart of hospital management (Giao & Khanh, 2018).

Thirdly, other factors influence patient satisfaction, such as hospital facilities and environment, patient care, time saved for patients, etc. should perform synchronously to achieve high resonance. One thing to note, the cost of outpatient care does not have an impact on outpatient satisfaction, but Vietnam is classified in middle-income category, people have sensitivity to cost when deciding on a hospital, managers should develop a pricing policy that is appropriate for the private hospital’s target customers.

5.2. Conclusion

This study has achieved its initial goal of developing and validating scales of factors that affect outpatient satisfaction, and developing and validating an outpatient satisfaction model at private general hospitals in HCMC. This research aims to provide private hospital managers with appropriate approaches to improve outpatient satisfaction, thereby maintaining a good relationship with the community and bring effectiveness for the hospital. This study has developed a range of factors affecting outpatient satisfaction in general hospitals in HCMC. In the general model, five factors influence the satisfaction of outpatients in private general hospitals: the hospital’s infrastructure and environment; doctors and nurses’qualifications, hospital care for patients, treatment outcome, and treatment time. This study is based on the outpatient’s point of view; the outpatient’s perception of quality of care is always limited. The model in this study reflects the large number of low and middle-income outpatients, then, a model for high-income groups should be developed in the future. This study may serve as a basis for the study of repeat use behaviors, hospital choice behaviors, or price acceptability in outpatient clinics. In addition, the inpatient satisfaction model should be developed separately.

5.3. Limitations of the Research

Limitations of the study are as follows: (1) the study was conducted at the top five private general hospitals in HCMC, so its representativeness is not high, it is difficult to generalize the findings to the whole community of private hospitals; (2) the target of this study are outpatients who were treated at the top five private general hospitals in HCMC, so there will be limitations in offering solutions to all patients; (3) the study was conducted in the last quarter of 2019 when patients had no experience towards the corona virus pandemy 2019, so that the evaluation was in normal conditions; (4) the results only explain 65.9% of the variable value of the service quality at the top five private general hospitals in HCMC, this proves that there are other factors that affect the quality of service delivered, which this study has not mentioned. These limitations call for further research directions.

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피인용 문헌

  1. Element of Marketing: SERVQUAL Toward Patient Loyalty in the Private Hospital Sector vol.8, pp.1, 2021, https://doi.org/10.13106/jafeb.2021.vol8.no1.419
  2. The Customer Satisfaction Index Model: An Empirical Study of the Private Healthcare Sector in Malaysia vol.9, pp.1, 2022, https://doi.org/10.13106/jafeb.2022.vol9.no1.0093