Thom David H, Kravitz Richard L, Bell Robert A, Krupat Edward, Azari Rahman
University of California at San Francisco School of Medicine, SF General Hospital, 1001 Potrero Avenue, Building 80/83, San Francisco, CA 94110, USA.
Fam Pract. 2002 Oct;19(5):476-83. doi: 10.1093/fampra/19.5.476.
Patient trust is a key component of the patient-physician relationship. A previous qualitative study has suggested that a low level of trust is associated with unfulfilled requests.
Our aim was to test the hypothesis that patients with a low level of trust will be more likely to report that requested or needed services were not provided during an office visit.
An observational study was carried out of office visits by 732 patients of 45 physicians (16 family physicians, 18 general internists and 11 cardiologists), within two managed care settings. Participants were consecutive, English-speaking patients, age 18 and older who had a significant health concern. Visit questionnaires were completed by 68% of patients known to be eligible. Post-visit measures included services requested (information, examination, prescription, test or referral); services provided; and requested or needed services not provided during the visit. Measures at 2-week follow-up included patient satisfaction, intended adherence to advice, interval contacts with the health system and symptom improvement.
After adjustment for patient and physician characteristics, patient trust in the physician was not associated with the likelihood that a service was requested or provided during the visit, with the exception that prescription of a new medication was more frequent among patients with higher trust. In contrast, patients with low trust prior to the visit consistently were more likely to report that a needed or requested service was not provided (P < 0.001 for all services). Patients with a low level of trust were less satisfied with their care (P < 0.001), were less likely to intend to follow the doctor's advice (P < 0.001) and were less likely to report symptom improvement at 2 weeks (P = 0.03).
Patients with a lower level of trust in their physician are more likely to report that requested or needed services are not provided. Understanding this relationship may lead to better ways of responding to patient requests that preserve or enhance patient trust, leading to better outcomes.
患者信任是医患关系的关键组成部分。先前的一项定性研究表明,低水平的信任与未得到满足的请求相关。
我们的目的是检验这一假设,即信任水平低的患者更有可能报告在门诊就诊期间所请求或需要的服务未得到提供。
在两个管理式医疗环境中,对45名医生(16名家庭医生、18名普通内科医生和11名心脏病专家)的732名患者的门诊就诊情况进行了一项观察性研究。参与者为连续就诊的、年龄在18岁及以上且有重大健康问题的英语患者。已知符合条件的患者中有68%完成了就诊问卷。就诊后测量指标包括所请求的服务(信息、检查、处方、检验或转诊);所提供的服务;以及就诊期间未提供的所请求或需要的服务。两周随访时的测量指标包括患者满意度、对建议的预期依从性、与卫生系统的间隔接触以及症状改善情况。
在对患者和医生特征进行调整后,患者对医生的信任与就诊期间请求或提供服务的可能性无关,但有一个例外,即信任度较高的患者中开具新药物处方的情况更为频繁。相比之下,就诊前信任度低的患者始终更有可能报告所需要或请求的服务未得到提供(所有服务的P<0.001)。信任水平低的患者对其护理的满意度较低(P<0.001),不太可能打算听从医生的建议(P<0.001),并且在两周时报告症状改善的可能性较小(P = 0.03)。
对医生信任水平较低的患者更有可能报告所请求或需要的服务未得到提供。了解这种关系可能会带来更好的方式来回应患者的请求,从而维护或增强患者信任,进而带来更好的结果。