Beach Mary Catherine, Rosner Mary, Cooper Lisa A, Duggan Patrick S, Shatzer John
Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21287, USA.
Acad Med. 2007 Feb;82(2):193-8. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31802d94b2.
Patient-centeredness has been advocated to reduce racial/ethnic disparities in health care quality, but no empirical data support such a connection. The authors' purpose was to determine whether students with patient-centered attitudes have better performance and are less likely to demonstrate disparities with African American compared with white standardized patients (SPs).
Third-year medical students were assessed by SPs at the Clinical Educational Center of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2002. One African American and one white actor were trained as SPs for each of four case scenarios; students were randomly assigned to interact with either SP for each case. Before the exam, students were surveyed about their attitudes towards patient-centered medicine. Students with and without patient-centered attitudes were compared with regard to their performance with African American and white SPs. Outcome measures were student exam scores in interpersonal skill, history taking, physical exam, and counseling.
All 177 of eligible students participated in all four case scenarios. With white SPs, students with patient-centered attitudes performed similarly to students without patient-centered attitudes in all four areas. However, with African American SPs, students with patient-centered attitudes performed significantly better than students without patient-centered attitudes in interpersonal skills (71.4 versus 69.4, P = .010), history taking (63.8 versus 61.1, P = .003), and counseling (92.1 versus 88.7, P = .002) and not significantly different in physical exam performance (73.6 versus 68.6, P = .311).
Patient-centered attitudes may be more important in improving physician behaviors with African American patients than with white patients and may, therefore, play a role in reducing disparities.
以患者为中心的理念已被倡导用于减少医疗保健质量方面的种族/族裔差异,但尚无实证数据支持这种联系。作者的目的是确定与白人标准化病人(SP)相比,具有以患者为中心态度的学生是否表现更好,并且与非裔美国标准化病人之间出现差异的可能性更小。
2002年,约翰·霍普金斯大学医学院临床教育中心的标准化病人对三年级医学生进行了评估。针对四种病例场景,分别培训了一名非裔美国人和一名白人演员作为标准化病人;学生被随机分配与每种病例的其中一名标准化病人进行互动。考试前,对学生关于以患者为中心的医疗态度进行了调查。比较了有无以患者为中心态度的学生与非裔美国和白人标准化病人互动时的表现。结果指标是学生在人际技能、病史采集、体格检查和咨询方面的考试成绩。
所有177名符合条件的学生都参与了全部四种病例场景。与白人标准化病人互动时,有以患者为中心态度的学生在所有四个方面的表现与没有以患者为中心态度的学生相似。然而,与非裔美国标准化病人互动时,有以患者为中心态度的学生在人际技能(71.4对69.4,P = 0.010)、病史采集(63.8对61.1,P = 0.003)和咨询(92.1对88.7,P = 0.002)方面的表现明显优于没有以患者为中心态度的学生,在体格检查表现方面无显著差异(73.6对68.6,P = 0.311)。
以患者为中心的态度在改善医生与非裔美国患者的行为方面可能比与白人患者更为重要,因此可能在减少差异方面发挥作用。