“…Seven dimensions of care were assessed based on prior research on patient selection of primary care doctors and hospitals [12]: (1) physician reputation (eg, primary care doctor recommendation, patient ratings in satisfaction surveys, malpractice suits or complaints about the surgeon), (2) physician manner (eg, the surgeon spends adequate time answering questions, the surgeon communicates clearly, the surgeon values patient opinion), (3) physician quality (eg, the surgeon adheres to accepted performance standards [eg, delivering appropriate antibiotics to patients before surgery], the surgeon's procedure volume relative to peers, the rate of surgical complications [eg, infection or nerve damage] relative to peers, the rate of reoperation within 1 year relative to peers), (4) physician qualifications (the number of years in practice, participation in research, medical school attended, postgraduate clinical training [residency, fellowship]), (5) hospital factors (the surgeon operates in patient's hospital of choice, the total number of similar orthopaedic procedures performed in the hospital, the hospital is affiliated with a medical school, the hospital's reputation among patients and doctors), (6) customer service (the ease of scheduling an appointment, the friendliness and availability of the office staff, the appearance and environment of the office, wait time until appointment), and (7) other nonclinical factors (the surgeon's clinic and hospital are convenient to visit, patient's out-of-pocket cost for a specific surgeon and hospital).…”