Does Hospital Ownership Affect Patient Experience? An Investigation Into Public-Private Sector Differences in England
Using patient experience survey data, the paper investigates whether hospital ownership affects the
level of quality reported by patients whose care is funded by the National Health Service in areas
other than clinical quality. We estimate a switching regression model that accounts for (i) some
observable characteristics of the patient and the hospital episode; (ii) selection into private
hospitals; and (iii) unmeasured hospital characteristics captured by hospital fixed effects.
We find that the experience reported by patients in public and private hospitals is different, i.e.,
most dimensions of quality are delivered differently by the two types of hospitals, with each sector
offering greater quality in certain specialties or to certain groups of patients. However, the sum of
all ownership effects is not statistically different from zero at sample means. In other words,
hospital ownership in and of itself does not affect the level of quality of the average patient‘s
reported experience. Differences in mean reported quality levels between the private and public
sectors are entirely attributable to patient characteristics, the selection of patients into public or
private hospitals and unobserved characteristics specific to individual hospitals, rather than to
hospital ownership.
PÉROTIN Virginie;
ZAMORA TALAYA Maria Bernarda;
REEVES Rachel;
BARTLETT Will;
ALLEN Pauline;
2013-04-12
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
JRC80823
0167-6296,
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167629613000337,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC80823,
10.1016/j.jhealeco.2013.03.003,
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