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How patients value visit type, speed of care, and continuity in primary care

Patient valuation of visit types, speed of care, and continuity with primary care physicians: a discrete-choice survey

2026-01-26
(Press-News.org) Original Research

How Patients Value Visit Type, Speed of Care, and Continuity in Primary Care

Background: Many patients use patient portals to message their primary care clinician, but demand for in-person appointments remains high. Researchers from the University of Michigan examined how patients value trade-offs between quick portal messaging, getting a visit sooner with any available physician, or waiting longer to see their own primary care physician. The study analyzed 2,268 survey responses from adult patients in an academic family medicine clinic. Researchers asked patients to imagine common health situations, such as a new symptom, a medication question, or a mental health concern. Patients then chose between care options that varied by type and timing. 

What They Found: Across all six scenarios, patients most often preferred a portal message from their own primary care physician within three days over waiting for video or in-person visits. When patients did not choose portal messaging, they generally preferred a faster video visit with another physician rather than waiting longer to see their own physician.

Implications: Patients’ strong preference for rapid portal messaging highlights growing pressure on primary care clinics, as responding to messages takes time and adds to clinician workload. 

Patient Valuation of Visit Types, Speed of Care, and Continuity With Primary Care Physicians: A Discrete-Choice Survey

Katherine J. Gold, MD, MSW, MS, et al

Department of Family Medicine, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

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[Press-News.org] How patients value visit type, speed of care, and continuity in primary care
Patient valuation of visit types, speed of care, and continuity with primary care physicians: a discrete-choice survey