Deloitte research shows good patient experience is associated with higher hospital profitability. This association is strongest for aspects of patient experience most closely associated with better care—in particular, nurse-patient engagement.
Improving the patient experience can help a hospital improve its financial performance by strengthening customer loyalty, building reputation and brand, and boosting utilization of hospital services through increased referrals to family and friends.
Payers looking for better value are also helping to drive hospitals to focus on patient experience: Programs such as Medicare’s Hospital Value-Based Purchasing (VBP) Program are financially rewarding hospitals that have better patient-reported experience scores. As a result, patient experience scores for factors as diverse as nighttime noise level and doctors’ and nurses’ communication skills have become a key hospital performance measure.
Because of the patient and payment factors, one might expect that hospitals with better patient experience scores might perform better financially—but the relationship has not been well studied. To gain greater insight into the association between better patient-reported experience scores and hospital financial performance, the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions conducted descriptive and regression analyses using the most widely tracked measures of patient experience—the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (HCAHPS) scores—and examined their association with hospital performance measures such as net and operating margins and return on assets (ROA). To more clearly delineate the contribution of patient experience, the Deloitte Center for Health Solutions controlled for hospital and local area characteristics that can also affect hospital performance, including hospital ownership, location, teaching status, payer and patient case mix. Two main findings emerged:
The Deloitte Center for Health Solutions also studied the mechanisms through which the association between patient experience and hospital financial performance likely occurs. The results indicate that:
Faced with multiple priorities and resource demands, health systems and hospitals may question the business value of collecting, analyzing, and acting upon patient experience data. However, these results suggest that good patient experience is associated with higher hospital
The results could also suggest that better-performing hospitals make larger patient experience investments. However, given the market shift towards patient-centered care and renewed