Electronic consultation accessibility influence on patient assessments: A case–control study with user-generated tags of physician expertise

Author:

Yu Haiyan1,Chiu Ya-Ling2,Wang Jying-Nan2,Yu Jiang3,Hsu Yuan-Teng4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Data and Decision Sciences, Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Chongqing, China

2. College of International Business, Zhejiang Yuexiu University, Zhejiang, China

3. The Fourth People's Hospital of Banan District, Chongqing, China

4. Research Center of Finance, Shanghai Business School, Shanghai, China

Abstract

Objective In online health communities (OHCs), patients often list their physicians’ expertise by user-generated tags based on their consulted diseases. These expertise tags play an essential role in recommending the match of physicians to future patients. However, few studies have examined the impact of the accessibility of e-consults on patient assessments using marking of the physicians’ expertise in OHCs. This study aims to investigate what are the patient assessments of the physicians’ expertise if they have e-consult accessibility. Methods Through a case–control study, this article examined the effect of e-consult accessibility on patient-generated tags of physician expertise in OHCs. With data collected from the Good Doctor website, the samples consisted of 9841 physicians from 1255 different hospitals widely distributed in China. The breadth of voted expertise (BE) is measured by the number of consulted disease-related labels marked by a physician's served patients (SP). The volume of votes (VV) is measured by the number of a physician's votes given by the SP. The degree of voted diversity (DD) is measured by the information entropy of each physician's service expertise (labeled and voted by patients). The data analysis of e-consult accessibility is conducted by estimating the average treatment effect on the DD of physicians’ expertise. Results For the BE, its mean was 7.305 for the case group of physicians with e-consults accessible (photo and text queries), while the mean was 9.465 for the control for physicians without e-consults. For the VV, its mean was 39.720 for the case group, while the mean was 84.565 for the control. For the DD, its mean on patient-generated tags was 2.103 for the case group, which is 0.413 lower than the control group. Conclusion The availability of e-consults increases the concentration on physician expertise in the patient-generated tags. e-Consults reinforce the increment of the already-received physician expertise (reflected in tags), reducing the tag information diversity.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Information Management,Computer Science Applications,Health Informatics,Health Policy

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