Howard Daniel L, Bunch Carol D, Mundia Wilberforce O, Konrad Thomas R, Edwards Lloyd J, Ahinee Amamoo M, Jallah Yhenneko
The Institute for Health, Social, and Community Research at Shaw University, Raleigh, NC 27601, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2006 Dec;41(6):2155-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2006.00587.x.
To examine the relationship that international medical school graduates (IMGs) in comparison with United States medical school graduates (USMGs) have on health care-seeking behavior and satisfaction with medical care among African-American and white elderly.
Secondary data analysis of the 1986-1998 Piedmont Health Survey of the Elderly, Established Populations for the Epidemiological Study of the Elderly, a racially oversampled urban and rural cohort of elders in five North Carolina counties.
Primary focus of analyses examined the impact of the combination of elder race and physician graduate status across time using a linear model for repeated measures analyses and chi2 tests. Separate analyses using generalized estimating equations were conducted for each measure of elder characteristic and health behavior. The analytic cohort included 341 physicians and 3,250 elders (65 years old and older) in 1986; by 1998, 211 physicians and 1,222 elders.
DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: Trained personnel collected baseline measures on 4,162 elders (about 80 percent responses) through 90-minute in-home interviews.
Over time, IMGs treated more African-American elders, and those who had less education, lower incomes, less insurance, were in poorer health, and who lived in rural areas. White elders with IMGs delayed care more than those with USMGs. Both races indicated being unsure about where to go for medical care. White elders with IMGs were less satisfied than those with USMGs. Both races had perceptions of IMGs that relate to issues of communication, cultural competency, ageism, and unnecessary expenses.
IMGs do provide necessary and needed access to medical care for underserved African Americans and rural populations. However, it is unclear whether concerns regarding cultural competency, communication and the quality of care undermine the contribution IMGs make to these populations.
研究国际医学院校毕业生(IMGs)与美国医学院校毕业生(USMGs)相比,对非裔美国人和白人老年人的就医行为及医疗满意度的影响。
对1986 - 1998年皮埃蒙特老年人健康调查的二次数据分析,该调查是老年人流行病学研究的既定人群,是北卡罗来纳州五个县城乡老年人的种族过度抽样队列。
分析的主要重点是使用重复测量分析的线性模型和卡方检验,研究老年人种族和医生毕业状态的组合随时间的影响。针对老年人特征和健康行为的每项指标,使用广义估计方程进行单独分析。分析队列包括1986年的341名医生和3250名老年人(65岁及以上);到1998年,有211名医生和1222名老年人。
数据收集/提取方法:经过培训的人员通过90分钟的家庭访谈,收集了4162名老年人的基线测量数据(约80%的回复率)。
随着时间的推移,IMGs治疗的非裔美国老年人更多,这些老年人受教育程度较低、收入较低、保险较少、健康状况较差且居住在农村地区。有IMGs的白人老年人比有USMGs的白人老年人延迟就医的情况更多。两个种族都表示不确定去哪里就医。有IMGs的白人老年人比有USMGs的白人老年人满意度更低。两个种族对IMGs的看法都涉及沟通、文化能力、年龄歧视和不必要费用等问题。
IMGs确实为服务不足的非裔美国人和农村人口提供了必要且急需的医疗服务。然而,关于文化能力、沟通和医疗质量的担忧是否会削弱IMGs对这些人群的贡献尚不清楚。