Swanson Karen A, Bastani Roshan, Rubenstein Lisa V, Meredith Lisa S, Ford Daniel E
School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, USA.
Med Care Res Rev. 2007 Aug;64(4):416-30. doi: 10.1177/1077558707299479.
This study sought to understand if shared decision making and/or receipt of mental health care was associated with patient satisfaction for patients with depression and to determine whether gender modified this relationship. The data are from the Quality Improvement for Depression study, a national collaborative study of 1,481 patients diagnosed with major depression in managed care settings. The cross-sectional analyses were performed using multiple logistic regression on a sample of 1,317 patients who answered both the baseline and month six questionnaires. Shared decision making and receipt of mental health care were both positively associated with patient satisfaction. Gender was not a moderator of this relationship. Health plans may be able to improve patient satisfaction levels by teaching physicians the importance of shared decision making. Contrary to expectations, patient gender made no difference in the effects of quality of care on patient satisfaction.
本研究旨在了解共同决策和/或接受心理健康护理是否与抑郁症患者的患者满意度相关,并确定性别是否会改变这种关系。数据来自抑郁症质量改进研究,这是一项在管理式医疗环境中对1481名被诊断为重度抑郁症患者进行的全国性合作研究。对1317名同时回答了基线问卷和六个月问卷的患者样本进行了多因素逻辑回归横断面分析。共同决策和接受心理健康护理均与患者满意度呈正相关。性别不是这种关系的调节因素。健康计划或许可以通过教导医生共同决策的重要性来提高患者满意度水平。与预期相反,患者性别在护理质量对患者满意度的影响方面没有差异。