Hospitality healthscapes: A conjoint analysis approach to understanding patient responses to hotel-like hospital rooms Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • 2016 Elsevier Ltd In an increasingly competitive market, healthcare providers are incorporating best practices from the hospitality industry to improve the patient experience. The present study offers a model of hospitality healthscapes to provide a patient-based perspective of the infusion of hospitality into healthcare. A study of 406 respondents examined the hotel-like attributes that patients prefer in hospital rooms and the effect of their provision on patients well-being and willingness to pay higher out-of-pocket expenses. Using conjoint analysis and 3D visual representations of hospital rooms, the study found that high-end material finishes and hospitality-certified healthcare staff were the two greatest influences on patient choice. The study also found some differences between the preferences of less healthy and more healthy patients, with the less healthy patients willing to pay, on average, 13% higher out-of-pocket expenses for hotel-like hospital rooms than the more healthy patients. This study represents the first attempt in the evidence-based design literature to holistically and empirically examine the infusion of hospitality into healthcare by emphasizing the patient as customer. The findings have important marketing implications for healthcare providers who wish to enhance the patient experience.

published proceedings

  • INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT

author list (cited authors)

  • Suess, C., & Mody, M.

citation count

  • 45

complete list of authors

  • Suess, Courtney||Mody, Makarand

publication date

  • February 2017