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  4. Robotic‑assisted surgery for prostatectomy – does the diffusion of robotic systems contribute to treatment centralization and influence patients’ hospital choice?
 
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Robotic‑assisted surgery for prostatectomy – does the diffusion of robotic systems contribute to treatment centralization and influence patients’ hospital choice?

Journal
Health Economics Review
Series
1; 29
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2023-05-10
Author(s)
David Kuklinski  
Justus Vogel  orcid-logo
Cornelia Henschke
Christoph Pross
Alexander Geissler  
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13561-023-00444-
Abstract
Background: Between 2008 and 2018, the share of robotic-assisted surgeries (RAS) for radical prostatectomies (RPEs) has increased from 3 to 46% in Germany. Firstly, we investigate if this diffusion of RAS has contributed to RPE treatment centralization. Secondly, we analyze if a hospital’s use of an RAS system influenced patients’ hospital choice.
Methods: To analyze RPE treatment centralization, we use (bi-) annual hospital data from 2006 to 2018 for all German hospitals in a panel-data fixed effect model. For investigating RAS systems’ influence on patients’ hospital choice, we use patient level data of 4614 RPE patients treated in 2015. Employing a random utility choice model, we estimate the influence of RAS as well as specialization and quality on patients’ marginal utilities and their according willingness to travel.
Results: Despite a slight decrease in RPEs between 2006 and 2018, hospitals that invested in an RAS system could increase their case volumes significantly (+ 82% compared to hospitals that did not invest) contributing to treatment centralization. Moreover, patients are willing to travel longer for hospitals offering RAS (+ 22% than average travel time) and for specialization (+ 13% for certified prostate cancer treatment centers, + 9% for higher procedure volume). The influence of outcome quality and service quality on patients’ hospital choice is insignificant or negligible.
Conclusions: In conclusion, centralization is partly driven by (very) high-volume hospitals’ investment in RAS systems and patient preferences. While outcome quality might improve due to centralization and according specialization, evidence for a direct positive influence of RAS on RPE outcomes still is ambiguous. Patients have been voting with their feet, but research yet has to catch up.
Language
English
Keywords
Robotic-assisted surgery
Radical prostatectomy
Provider choice
Quality of care
Treatment centralization
Volume
13
Official URL
https://link.springer.com/epdf/10.1186/s13561-023-00444-9?sharing_token=FlpJURXBFdEbN9bcsERvtW_BpE1tBhCbnbw3BuzI2RMLGgz_XbSuCztAi1PXYurJj4F1BVw13-FW1_-xYkvOxgYxbq-v8heQG_gAearxnN164HEbW2OfCUh72vyu_xdAIkMaFdQJscebTCuOuA7K7YDDEIU9uAnYED0oR9J5V70=
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/117489
Subject(s)

health sciences

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MED - School of Medic...

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Kuklinski_et_al-2023-Health_Economics_Review.pdf

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