A Demonstration of the Impact of Response Bias on the Results of Patient Satisfaction Surveys
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Health Services Research
- Vol. 37 (5) , 1403-1417
- https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6773.11194
Abstract
Objectives. The purposes of the present study were to examine patient satisfaction survey data for evidence of response bias, and to demonstrate, using simulated data, how response bias may impact interpretation of results.Data Sources. Patient satisfaction ratings of primary care providers (family practitioners and general internists) practicing in the context of a group‐model health maintenance organization and simulated data generated to be comparable to the actual data.Study Design. Correlational analysis of actual patient satisfaction data, followed by a simulation study where response bias was modeled, with comparison of results from biased and unbiased samples.Principal Findings. A positive correlation was found between mean patient satisfaction rating and response rate in the actual patient satisfaction data. Simulation results suggest response bias could lead to overestimation of patient satisfaction overall, with this effect greatest for physicians with the lowest satisfaction scores.Conclusions. Findings suggest that response bias may significantly impact the results of patient satisfaction surveys, leading to overestimation of the level of satisfaction in the patient population overall. Estimates of satisfaction may be most inflated for providers with the least satisfied patients, thereby threatening the validity of provider‐level comparisons.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patient Satisfaction With Hospital CareMedical Care, 2000
- Identification of Occupational Cancer Risks in British ColumbiaJournal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, 1999
- SURVEY RESEARCHAnnual Review of Psychology, 1999
- Non-response bias in a study of cardiovascular diseases, functional status and self-rated health among elderly menAge and Ageing, 1998
- Does Sponsorship Matter in Patient Satisfaction Surveys?Medical Care, 1996
- A National Survey of the Arrangements Managed-Care Plans Make with PhysiciansNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Assessing Satisfaction and Non-Response Bias in an HMO-Sponsored Employee Assistance ProgramEmployee Assistance Quarterly, 1995
- Resident-patient interactionsAcademic Medicine, 1994
- Investigating non-response bias in a survey of disablement in the community: implications for survey methodology.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1991
- Response Bias Using Two-Stage Data CollectionEvaluation Review, 1988