Paying for Enhanced Service Comparing Patients' Experiences in a Concierge and General Medicine Practice PATIENT-PATIENT CENTERED OUTCOMES RESEARCH Ko, J. M., Rodriguez, H. P., Fairchild, D. G., Rodday, A. M., Safran, D. G. 2009; 2 (2): 95-103

Abstract

Concierge medical practice is a relatively new and somewhat controversial development in primary-care practice. These practices promise patients more personalized care and dedicated service, in exchange for an annual membership fee paid by patients. The experiences of patients using these practices remain largely undocumented.To assess the experiences of patients in a concierge medicine practice compared with those in a general medicine practice.Stratified random samples of patients empanelled to each of the four doctors who practice at both a general medicine and a concierge medicine practice separately situated at an academic medical center were drawn. Patients were eligible for the study if they had a visit with the physician between January and May 2006. The study questionnaire (Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Clinician and Group Survey, supplemented with items from the Ambulatory Care Experiences Survey) was administered by mail to 100 general medicine patients per physician (n?=?400) and all eligible concierge medicine patients (n?=?201). Patients who completed the survey and affirmed the study physician as their primary-care physician formed the analytic sample (n?=?344) that was used to compare the experiences of concierge medicine and general medicine patients. Models controlled for respondent characteristics and accounted for patient clustering within physicians using physician fixed effects.Patients' experiences with organizational features of care, comprising care co-ordination (p?

View details for DOI 10.2165/01312067-200902020-00005

View details for Web of Science ID 000208001400005

View details for PubMedID 22273085