Abstract

Introduction

Prior studies find that critical access hospitals (CAHs), which serve patients who would otherwise have limited access to hospitals, provide lower-quality clinical care than Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) hospitals; evidence is limited about the patient experiences they provide.

Methods

Using linear mixed-effects regression models, we compared patient-mix adjusted HCAHPS Survey scores for CAHs and IPPS hospitals and evaluated how much of the observed differences were associated with size, location, and other hospital characteristics.

Results

CAH patients are older, more often in the medical service line, have lower educational attainment, and have worse self-rated health than IPPS counterparts. Accounting for such differences, CAH patients had better experiences (+8 points on the 0-100 HCAHPS-Summary Score, where differences >5 are considered large by patient experience heuristics), especially for staff responsiveness, cleanliness, quietness, and discharge information.

CAHs do not outperform similarly small IPPS hospitals, which often have different missions (e.g. for-profit surgical specialty hospitals). For-profit and teaching status, while uncommon among CAHs, predicted lower CAH HCAHPS performance.

Conclusion

Despite the limited services provided by CAHs, their small scale may facilitate positive experiences for patients in areas with limited hospital choices. For-profit and teaching CAHs may benefit from quality improvement efforts.

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Supplementary data