Purpose: Rural emergency department (ED) patients require interhospital transfer for definitive care at nearly 6 times the national rate, yet transfer decision-making is variable. The goal of this study was to understand patient experiences, preferences, and decision-making in the rural interhospital transfer process, and to measure the concordance between patient opinions and provider perceptions.

Methods: Ours is a mixed methods study of patients transferred to a 711-bed Midwestern academic medical center and the emergency physicians in community hospitals. Qualitative interviews were conducted by a single research assistant with admitted patients transferred from an ED, and a corresponding survey was distributed to community emergency physicians. Standardized scenarios were posed to both groups to understand transfer priorities.

Findings: Seventy-nine patients and 40 physicians participated in this study. Patients and physicians cited proximity to home, medical expertise, a personal relationship with a health care provider, health insurance, privacy concerns, and patient choice as the primary factors that influenced patient transfer priorities. Compared with patient respondents, physicians overestimated the patient-perceived importance of proximity to home (P = .015) and being cared for by a personal physician (P = .049), but they underestimated the value of receiving treatment in a comprehensive medical center (P = .002). In standardized scenarios, physicians agreed with patients in transfer preferences for conditions requiring neurosurgical consultation, but they underestimated patients' desire for transfer for pneumonia requiring mechanical ventilation.

Conclusion: Patients and physicians recognize similar factors that influence patient preferences in interhospital ED transfer, but physicians may overestimate the value of nonmedical influences on decision-making priorities.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jrh.12125DOI Listing

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