Fernandez Alicia, Schillinger Dean, Grumbach Kevin, Rosenthal Anne, Stewart Anita L, Wang Frances, Pérez-Stable Eliseo J
Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, Calif. 94110, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2004 Feb;19(2):167-74. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2004.30266.x.
We studied physician-patient dyads to determine how physician self-rated Spanish-language ability and cultural competence affect Spanish-speaking patients' reports of interpersonal processes of care.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Questionnaire study of 116 Spanish-speaking patients with diabetes and 48 primary care physicians (PCPs) at a public hospital with interpreter services.
Primary care physicians rated their Spanish ability on a 5-point scale and cultural competence by rating: 1) their understanding of the health-related cultural beliefs of their Spanish-speaking patients; and 2) their effectiveness with Latino patients, each on a 4-point scale. We assessed patients' experiences using the interpersonal processes of care (IPC) in diverse populations instrument. Primary care physician responses were dichotomized, as were IPC scale scores (optimal vs nonoptimal). We analyzed the relationship between language and two cultural competence items and IPC, and a summary scale and IPC, using multivariate models to adjust for known confounders of communication.
Greater language fluency was strongly associated with optimal IPC scores in the domain of elicitation of and responsiveness to patients, problems and concerns [Adjusted Odds Ratio [AOR], 5.25; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.59 to 17.27]. Higher score on a language-culture summary scale was associated with three IPC domains - elicitation/responsiveness (AOR, 6.34; 95% CI, 2.1 to 19.3), explanation of condition (AOR, 2.7; 95% CI, 1.0 to 7.34), and patient empowerment (AOR, 3.13; 95% CI, 1.2 to 8.19)-and not associated with two more-technical communication domains.
Physician self-rated language ability and cultural competence are independently associated with patients' reports of interpersonal process of care in patient-centered domains. Our study provides empiric support for the importance of language and cultural competence in the primary care of Spanish-speaking patients.
我们对医患二元组进行了研究,以确定医生自我评定的西班牙语能力和文化能力如何影响讲西班牙语患者对口护人际过程的报告。
设置/参与者:在一家设有口译服务的公立医院,对116名讲西班牙语的糖尿病患者和48名初级保健医生(PCP)进行问卷调查研究。
初级保健医生用5分制对其西班牙语能力进行评分,并用4分制对文化能力进行评分,具体如下:1)他们对讲西班牙语患者与健康相关文化信仰的理解;2)他们对拉丁裔患者的治疗效果。我们使用不同人群的护人际过程(IPC)工具评估患者的体验。初级保健医生的回答进行了二分法分类,IPC量表得分也进行了二分法分类(最佳与非最佳)。我们使用多变量模型分析语言和两个文化能力项目与IPC之间的关系,以及一个汇总量表与IPC之间的关系,以调整已知的沟通混杂因素。
在引出并回应患者的问题和担忧方面,更高的语言流利程度与最佳IPC得分密切相关[调整后的优势比[AOR],5.25;95%置信区间[CI],1.59至17.27]。语言-文化汇总量表上的更高得分与IPC的三个领域相关——引出/回应(AOR,6.34;95%CI,2.1至19.3)、病情解释(AOR,2.7;95%CI,1.0至7.34)和患者赋权(AOR,3.13;95%CI,1.2至8.19)——而与另外两个更具专业性的沟通领域无关。
医生自我评定的语言能力和文化能力与患者在以患者为中心领域的口护人际过程报告独立相关。我们的研究为语言和文化能力在讲西班牙语患者初级保健中的重要性提供了实证支持。