Most Americans believe there are fair and reliable ways to gauge the quality of health care. 9 in 10 Americans are interested in their health plans having a website where you could rate doctors on issues like trust, communications, medical knowledge, availability and office environment – and participating on such social networks (think: The Health Care Scoop, or Zagat/WellPoint).
The latest Wall Street Journal/HarrisInteractive survey published March 25 finds that 3 in 4 consumers favor patient satisfaction surveys – once again asserting they value opinions from peers (aka “people like me”) even more than those coming from institutions, whether private sector (e.g., employers or health plans) or public (e.g., government agencies).
Nonetheless, consumers still do value other sources for ratings:
– 66% like medical boards
– 65% value assessments by third parties, such as JCAHO
– 64% of consumers like measurements on preventive screening tests
– 58% believe the use of EMRs is a proxy for quality
– 42% see malpractice suits as a useful measure of quality health care.
The timing of this poll nicely coincides with the news that Angie’s List – known for its home repair service ratings – launched a health care ratings service earlier this month. On Angie’s List, consumers will be able to rate some 50 types of health care providers – including doctors, dentists, pharmacies, hospitals and health plans.




