Abstract

The purpose of the paper is to describe and analyze differences in patients' quality perceptions of private and public primary care centers in Sweden. The article explores the differences in quality perceptions between patients of public and private primary care centers based on data from a large patient survey in Sweden. The survey covers seven dimensions, and in this paper the measure Overall impression was used for the comparison. With more than 80,000 valid responses, the survey covers all primary care centers in Sweden which allowed for a detailed analysis of differences in quality perceptions among patients from the different categories of owners. The article contributes with a detailed description of different types of private owners: not-for-profit and for profit, as well as corporate groups and independent care centers. The results show a higher quality perception for independent centers compared to both public and corporate groups. The small number of not-for-profit centers (21 out of 1,117 centers) does not allow for clear conclusions for this group. The results, however, indicate an even higher patient quality perception for not-for-profit centers. The study focus on describing differences in quality perceptions between the owner categories. Future research can contribute with explanations to why independent care centers receive higher patient satisfaction. The results from the study have policy implications both in a Swedish as well as international perspective. The differentiation between different types of private owners made in this paper opens up for interesting discussions on privatization of healthcare and how it affects patient satisfaction. The main contribution of the paper is the detailed comparison of different categories of private owners and the public owners.

Highlights

  • Many countries have healthcare systems that are open for both public and private care providers (Sheaff et al, 2019)

  • Sweden being at the forefront of mixing private and public ownership in healthcare, we argue that the results from this study are germane for countries that are aiming at similar changes in their healthcare systems

  • This paper aimed at showing how patient quality perceptions differ between different ownership categories in Swedish primary care

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Summary

Introduction

Many countries have healthcare systems that are open for both public and private care providers (Sheaff et al, 2019). Several countries have experimented with deregulation, privatization, customer-choice models and other ways of introducing private providers into the healthcare system. Sweden has been in the forefront of this wave of experiments, and has. © Thomas Andersson, Nomie Eriksson and Tomas Mu€llern. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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