The Influence of Quality of Service and Satisfaction on Word of
Mouth
Lino Pereira, Yuni Istanto, and Dyah Sugandini
Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Yogyakarta
Keywords: Quality of service, satisfaction, and word-of-mouth.
Abstract: This study is a survey study using inpatients in hospitals. Data were collected from 200 respondents using
non-probability sampling techniques. This study aims to analyze word of mouth which is influenced by
service quality and patient satisfaction. The quality of service in this study is divided into three dimensions,
namely responsiveness, assurance and empathy. This study uses inpatient respondents in hospitals in Timor
Leste and Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The results showed that all proposed hypotheses could be accepted.
Quality of service can influence Word of mouth by mediating patient satisfaction.
1 INTRODUCTION
In the last three decades, there has been increased
attention to the quality of health care services
(Rehaman & Husnain, 2018). The organization is
interested in identifying the most critical factors in
the organization which, if managed properly, will
ensure survival and success in the future. Some
hospitals also make efforts to promote their business
abroad in the medical tourism segment. The
euphoria and excitement about the health industry
are worthy of review in the context of service
quality. Especially after competitive issues and
increasingly strict game rules in this sector make
quality very important for the organization's long-
term success (Meesalaa & Paul, 2016).
Changes in lifestyle cause patients to require
quality health services because the standard of living
has also changed towards better medical care. The
quality of medical care accommodation has become
a major concern for patients, so hospitals are
expected to provide better accommodations to
patients (Rehaman & Husnain, 2018). Quality of
service is considered high and is an important factor
for creating customer satisfaction and can identify
services as a competitive advantage of the hospital
(Golmohammadi et al., 2014). Patients need high-
quality services provided by hospital staff. Patient
satisfaction is widely used in the health sector to
determine service quality (Ahmed, Tarique & Arif,
2017). Leiter et al. (1998) executed an empirical
study in the hospitals of Canadian, and the results
showed that nurses, doctors and the information
which received by the patient is influencing the
patient satisfaction.
As service quality increases, the probability of
customer satisfaction will also increase. Increased
customer satisfaction leads to behaviours such as
commitment, customer retention, and the creation of
mutually beneficial relationships with service
providers and users, increased customer tolerance
for service failures and positive word of mouth
advertising about organizations.
Service quality dimensions (SERVQUAL and
SERVPERF) that are widely accepted include:
tangibility, empathy, reliability, empathy, and
guarantees can be used to understand patient
satisfaction, especially in the context of developing
countries, where governments offer subsidies for
health care costs. The purpose of this study was to
analyze the impact on patients in developing
countries and their impact on word of mouth
(WOM). Previous literature has not been much
discussed about the quality of hospital services
associated with the characteristics of developing
countries. Characteristics of health services in
developing countries are the cost of subsidized
health care, low literacy rates, low levels of health
awareness, there is information asymmetry. And the
population is relatively very solid. This has the
potential to make patients dependent on the doctor's
advice which refers to the choice of the service
provider.
84
Pereira, L., Istanto, Y. and Sugandini, D.
The Influence of Quality of Service and Satisfaction on Word of Mouth.
DOI: 10.5220/0009964200840088
In Proceedings of the International Conference of Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management (ICBEEM 2019), pages 84-88
ISBN: 978-989-758-471-8
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
2 LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Word-of-Mouth
Word of mouth is part of customer loyalty.
Consumers who return several times to buy services
from the same company are loyal customers. Martin
(2017) argues that patient loyalty can be measured
from three components (1) Using service providers
again (2) Using service providers for different
treatments (3) speaking positively about service
providers and recommending to others (Meesalaa &
Paul, 2016).
Word of Mouth is a conversation between
consumers and other consumers about their
consumption experience (Wetzer et al. 2007). The
concept of WOM is important in the health care
sector (Goyette et al. 2010; Trigg 2011). Patients
increasingly want to be involved in their decision
making processes regarding their health care and
medical care (Niehues et al. 2012), and also for the
selection of hospital Martin’s(2017).
2.2 Service Quality
This study uses the SERVPERF model
As a measurement of service quality to make it
easier to understand the quality of services provided
by a hospital. SERVPERF is a service-based
performance measure (Cronin and Taylor, 1992;
1994). The SERVQUAL model, which compares
customer expectations before and after service
delivery (Parasuraman et al., 1988). Parasuraman et
al. (1985) argue that "the position of consumers'
perceptions of service quality on a continuum
depends on the nature of the difference between
expected services and perceived services". Cronin
and Taylor (1992) offer the first theoretical
justification for removing expectations of the
SERVQUAL portion and adding it to performance
measures. Cronin and Taylor (1992)
Develop performance-based measurement
instruments namely, SERVPERF (Service
Performance) which only focus on perceived service
quality. The SERVPERF model represents
performance or service quality measurements that
only focus on organizational performance felt by
consumers rather than focusing on the difference
between perceptions of performance versus their
expectations of service quality. Also, service quality
is measured only through the dimension of customer
perception rather than their expectations. Cronin &
Taylor (1994) develop the quality dimension into
five. (1) Reliability measured by indicators
maintains error-free records, sincere interest in
solving problems, delivering services as promised.
(2) Responsiveness is measured by responding
quickly, willing to help patients, offering fast
services to patients. (3) Assurance, including the
ability to instil confidence in patients, knows to
answer patient questions, the ability to deal with
patient problems. (4) Empathy, including giving
individual attention, comfortable consultation hours,
understanding the specific needs of patients. (5)
Tangibles, including the appearance of neat
employees, attractive visual facilities, neat
appearance of polyclinic services, professional
employee appearance, and modern equipment.
2.3 Customer Satisfaction
Meesalaa & Paul defines customer satisfaction as a
consumer response to an evaluation of perceived
differences between prior expectations and performs
the actual product or service after consumption.
Assessment of patient satisfaction has changed not
only from recovering from an illness during
hospitalisation, but patients have assessed
satisfaction is comprehensively starting from the
quality of services provided by doctors, nurses and
administration (Sreenivas & Babu, 2012).
Patient satisfaction can be described as the
attitude passed by the patient receiving the service to
whether or not the service is met. Hussain, Asif,
Jameel & Hwang (2019). The objectives of
analyzing patient satisfaction in the health service
sector are: (1) The organization must decide how the
level of satisfaction affects patients who seek
service, treatment and sustainably use services. (2).
Satisfaction is used as an indicator of the quality of
service delivery as well as to help doctors and health
care institutions to build a better understanding of
patient feedback. (3) Patient satisfaction with health
care services is a multi-aspect concept with aspects
that are connected to the main attributes of services
and providers. (4). Patient satisfaction becomes very
important in relation to quality improvement
programs from the patient context, total quality
management, and anticipated service outcomes (5)
Satisfied patients will continue to use health
services, maintain their relationships with certain
health service providers and comply with care
requests (Aldebasi & Ahmed, 2011; Hussain et al.,
2019).
The Influence of Quality of Service and Satisfaction on Word of Mouth
85
2.4 Hypothesis
H1: Responsiveness influences WOM with the
mediation of satisfaction
H2: Assurance influences WOM with the
mediation of satisfaction
H3: Empathy influences WOM with the
mediation of satisfaction
H4: Satisfaction influences WOM
3 RESEARCH METHOD
This study uses respondent patients who have been
hospitalized. Data were obtained from patients in
Timor-Leste and the Special Region of Yogyakarta,
Indonesia. This study uses a questionnaire with a
five-point Likert scale. The sampling technique is
convenience sampling. The number of samples
obtained was 200, consisting of 100 samples from
respondents from Timor-Leste, and 100 samples
from respondents from Yogyakarta Indonesia. Data
analysis techniques using Partial Least Square.
4 RESULTS
4.1 Characteristics of Respondents
Based on the results of research conducted on 200
respondents, it can be identified regarding the
characteristics of respondents as follows:
Table 1. The Characteristic of Respondents
A respondent from
Timor Leste
A respondent from
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Gender: Male 39%
Female 61%
41%
59%
Age (years).
21-30 17.5% 3 %
31-40 30.0% 13 %
41-50 26.7% 56 %
> 50 25.8% 39 %
Education
Elementary School 8.3% 42 %
Junior High School
20.8%
37 %
High School
36.7%
12.5 %
Diploma
20.0%
3 %
> Bachelor
14.2%
5.5 %
Work
Students / Students 5% 25 %
Civil Servants
18.3%
19.5 %
Soldiers / Police
11.7%
15 %
Private Employees
17.5%
9 %
Entrepreneurs
25%
12.5 %
Other
22.5%
19 %
The income
less than $ 50.00
13.3%
25 %
$ 50.00- $ 100.00
15.8%
29.5 %
$ 100.00- $ 200.00
11.7%
15 %
$ 200.00- $ 500.00
44.2%
12.5 %
> $ 500.00
15.0%
12.5 %
4.2 Results of Data Processing
Based on the results of data analysis, that has been
obtained p-value values that determine the
significance of the proposed hypothesis. The p-value
test results can be seen in table 2.
Table. 2. P-value
Original
Sample (O)
P Values
Assurance Satisfaction 0.533 0,000
Empathy Satisfaction 0.208 0,001
Responsiveness
Satisfaction
0.166 0,038
Satisfaction WOM 0.777 0,000
From the PLS 3.2.8, the output obtained the
value of the indirect effect of each variable as
follows (see table 3).
Table 3. Specific Indirect Effects
Specific Indirect Effects
Assurance Satisfaction
WOM
0.414
Empathy Satisfaction
WOM
0.162
Responsiveness
Satisfaction WOM
0.129
The appearance of the WOM model in hospital
patients can be seen in Figure 1.
ICBEEM 2019 - International Conference on Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management
86
Figure1. Model WOM
4.3 Discussion
The results of the PLS analysis show that there is a
positive and significant influence on the quality of
service to Word of Mouth. These results can be
interpreted that the quality of service plays an
important role in shaping the Word of Mouth at the
Health Clinic. This means that the better the quality
of service, the higher the Word of Mouth at the
Health Clinic.
The results show that there is a positive influence
on service quality on satisfaction. These results can
be interpreted that the quality of service plays an
important role in shaping patient satisfaction at the
Health Clinic. The influence of service quality on
patient satisfaction shows that the better the quality
of service, the higher the patient satisfaction. The
results show a positive effect on patient satisfaction
with Word of Mouth. This means that the higher the
patient's satisfaction, the patient's Word of Mouth
will increase. Patient satisfaction is a patient's
perception of a type of service experience they
experience.
The results also found that satisfaction was
proven as a variable mediating the relationship
between service quality to Word of Mouth. This
means that the better the quality of service, the
higher the patient satisfaction so that the higher the
patient's desire to do Word of Mouth.
5 CONCLUSIONS
Based on the results of the study as described in the
previous chapter, several conclusions can be drawn.
There is the effect of Responsiveness (16.6%) on
WOM with mediation satisfaction (p-value of 0.038)
so that the first hypothesis is supported. There is an
effect of Assurance (53.3%) on WOM with
satisfaction mediation (p-value of 0.00) so that the
second hypothesis is supported. There was an
influence of Empathy (20.8%) on WOM with
satisfaction mediation (p-value of 0.001), so that the
third hypothesis was supported. There is an effect of
Satisfaction (77.7%) on WOM (p-value of 0,000), so
the fourth hypothesis is supported.
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