2013
DOI: 10.5539/ijms.v5n4p15
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Perceptions of Service Quality and Behavioral Intentions: A Mediation Effect of Patient Satisfaction in the Private Health Care in Malaysia

Abstract: This study attempts to examine the mediation effect of satisfaction on service quality perception and intentions behavior of private hospital outpatients in Malaysia. 300 hospital outpatients were selected as the sample size. Regression analysis was run to test the hypotheses. Based on the 273 completed data, the results provide support for the association between perceived service quality dimensions (tangibles, assurance, and empathy) and behavioral intentions. The results also confirm that service quality pe… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
3
1
1

Citation Types

9
41
0
7

Year Published

2016
2016
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
10

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 41 publications
(57 citation statements)
references
References 69 publications
9
41
0
7
Order By: Relevance
“…Supporting patients to self-manage their health needs is a key priority in cancer service plans (Department of Health, Macmillan Cancer Support & NHS Improvement, 2013), therefore it is important to understand how individuals mobilize coping strategies for managing positive psychological health. The impact of the care environment on patients' well-being has been investigated from inpatient and outpatient perspectives in predominantly heterogeneous patient groups with multiple long-term conditions such as heart disease, asthma or musculoskeletal disorders (Aliman & Mohamad, 2013;Andrade, Lime, Pereira, Fornara, & Bonaiuto, 2013;Chang, Chen, & Lan, 2013;Medina-Mirapeix, Del Baño-Aledo, Oliveira-Sousa, Escolar-Reina, & Collins, 2013;Raven, Gillespie, DiBennardo, van Busum, & Elbel, 2012). These studies found that patients' treatment experiences were positively influenced by staff who were responsive, courteous and able to meet the individual's information needs and that nurse-led care was influential to the well-being outcomes of patients at various stages of the treatment pathway (Edvardsson, Watt, & Pearce, 2016;Larsson, Sahlsten, Sjostrom, Lindencrona, & Plos, 2007).…”
Section: Psychological Morbidity and The Cancer Treatment Trajectorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Supporting patients to self-manage their health needs is a key priority in cancer service plans (Department of Health, Macmillan Cancer Support & NHS Improvement, 2013), therefore it is important to understand how individuals mobilize coping strategies for managing positive psychological health. The impact of the care environment on patients' well-being has been investigated from inpatient and outpatient perspectives in predominantly heterogeneous patient groups with multiple long-term conditions such as heart disease, asthma or musculoskeletal disorders (Aliman & Mohamad, 2013;Andrade, Lime, Pereira, Fornara, & Bonaiuto, 2013;Chang, Chen, & Lan, 2013;Medina-Mirapeix, Del Baño-Aledo, Oliveira-Sousa, Escolar-Reina, & Collins, 2013;Raven, Gillespie, DiBennardo, van Busum, & Elbel, 2012). These studies found that patients' treatment experiences were positively influenced by staff who were responsive, courteous and able to meet the individual's information needs and that nurse-led care was influential to the well-being outcomes of patients at various stages of the treatment pathway (Edvardsson, Watt, & Pearce, 2016;Larsson, Sahlsten, Sjostrom, Lindencrona, & Plos, 2007).…”
Section: Psychological Morbidity and The Cancer Treatment Trajectorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As such, understanding the possible effects of interaction between public patients and private patients may contribute important insights to the knowledge of servicescape. Nonetheless, only a few studies have offered insights into such issues as how patients respond to two different types of -public and private -hospitals (Aliman and Mohamad, 2013). Most of the past researchers studied the influences of servicescape either in public patients or private patients alone (Azila-gbettor, 2013), thus, is has become elusive how the servicescape thrives in different types of patients.…”
Section: Public Patients and Private Patients As The Moderatormentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Behavioral intentions can be triggered by satisfaction with service quality and culture. The main dimensions of behavioral intentions are loyalty, internal and external responses to problems, and willingness to pay more (Zeithaml, Berry, & Parasuraman, 1996;Aliman and Mohamad, 2013). Japarianto (2006) said that the culture of students would determine student behavior because the culture is almost the same students tend to behave the same.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%