Policy summary 13: public reporting in health and long-term care to facilitate provider choice
Publication year: 2014
The availability of public reporting initiatives on the quality of health and longterm care providers has increased since the 1990s when many countries began
introducing choice of care provider policies.
One of the primary reasons for public reporting of quality information is to
assist patients and users, and other purchasers of care, in making informed
and rational choices regarding care providers. However, despite the extensive
investment, take-up of choice and use of quality information to inform decisions
by users and patients has been slow to materialize. This can be linked to a
range of barriers, including a lack of user-friendly quality information.
Public reporting of quality information often has other aims. These include
encouraging providers to improve the quality of their services, increasing
provider accountability, identifying failures, and providing the public with
reassurance over quality of care. However, this policy summary focuses on
its use as a mechanism to facilitate choice of provider by consumers or other
purchasers of care.