Beach Mary Catherine, Keruly Jeanne, Moore Richard D
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Jun;21(6):661-5. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00399.x.
Patient-centeredness, originally defined as understanding each patient as a unique person, is widely considered the standard for high-quality interpersonal care. The purpose of our study was to examine the association between patient perception of being "known as a person" and receipt of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), adherence to HAART, and health outcomes among patients with HIV.
Cross-sectional analysis.
One thousand seven hundred and forty-three patients with HIV.
Patient reports that their HIV provider "knows me as a person" and 3 outcomes: receipt of HAART, adherence to HAART, and undetectable serum HIV RNA.
Patients who reported that their provider knows them "as a person" were more likely to receive HAART (60% vs 47%, P<.001), be adherent to HAART (76% vs 67%, P=.007), and have undetectable serum HIV RNA (49% vs 39%, P<.001). Patients who reported their provider knows them "as a person" were also older (mean 38.0 vs 36.6 years, P<.001), reported higher quality-of-life (mean LASA score 71.1 vs 64.8, P<.001), had been followed in clinic longer (mean 64.4 vs 61.7 months, P=.008), missed fewer appointments (mean proportion missed appointments 0.124 vs 0.144, P<.001), reported more positive beliefs about HAART therapy (39% vs 28% strongly believed HIV medications could help them live longer, P<.008), reported less social stress (50% vs 62% did not eat regular meals, P<.001) and were less likely to use illicit drugs or alcohol (22% vs 33% used drugs, P<.001; 42% vs 53% used alcohol, P<.001). Controlling for patient age, sex, race/ethnicity, quality-of-life, length of time in clinic, missed appointments, health beliefs, social stress, and illicit drug and alcohol use, patients who reported their provider knows them "as a person" had higher odds of receiving HAART (odds ratio [OR] 1.41, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.19 to 1.65), adhering to HAART (OR 1.33, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.72), and having undetectable serum HIV RNA (1.20, 95% CI 1.02 to 1.41).
We found that a single item measuring the essence of patient-centeredness-the patients' perception of being "known as a person"-is significantly and independently associated with receiving HAART, adhering to HAART, and having undetectable serum HIV RNA. These results support the hypothesis that the quality of patient-physician relationship is directly related to the health of patients.
以患者为中心最初被定义为将每位患者视为独特个体,如今它被广泛视为高质量人际护理的标准。我们研究的目的是检验HIV患者对被“视为个体了解”的感知与接受高效抗逆转录病毒治疗(HAART)、坚持HAART治疗以及健康结局之间的关联。
横断面分析。
1743例HIV患者。
患者报告其HIV治疗医生“将我视为个体了解”以及3项结局:接受HAART治疗、坚持HAART治疗以及血清HIV RNA检测不到。
报告其治疗医生“将他们视为个体了解”的患者更有可能接受HAART治疗(60%对47%,P<0.001)、坚持HAART治疗(76%对67%,P=0.007)以及血清HIV RNA检测不到(49%对39%,P<0.001)。报告其治疗医生“将他们视为个体了解”的患者年龄也更大(平均38.0岁对36.6岁,P<0.001),报告的生活质量更高(平均LASA评分71.1对64.8,P<0.001),在诊所接受随访的时间更长(平均64.4个月对61.7个月,P=0.008),错过的预约更少(错过预约的平均比例0.124对0.144,P<0.001),对HAART治疗的积极信念更多(39%对28%坚信HIV药物可帮助他们活得更长,P<0.008),报告的社会压力更小(50%对62%没有规律饮食,P<0.001),且使用非法药物或酒精的可能性更低(22%对33%使用药物,P<0.001;42%对53%使用酒精,P<0.001)。在控制患者年龄、性别、种族/民族、生活质量、在诊所的时间长度、错过的预约、健康信念、社会压力以及非法药物和酒精使用情况后,报告其治疗医生“将他们视为个体了解”的患者接受HAART治疗的几率更高(优势比[OR]1.41,95%置信区间[CI]1.19至1.65)、坚持HAART治疗的几率更高(OR 1.33,95%CI 1.02至1.72)以及血清HIV RNA检测不到的几率更高(1.20,95%CI 1.02至1.41)。
我们发现,一项衡量以患者为中心本质的单一指标——患者对被“视为个体了解”的感知——与接受HAART治疗、坚持HAART治疗以及血清HIV RNA检测不到显著且独立相关。这些结果支持了医患关系质量与患者健康直接相关的假设。