Lee Jin Sun, Tamayo-Sarver Joshua, Kinneer Patricia, Hobgood Cherri
Department of Anesthesia, UCLA Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2008 Jan;100(1):79-85. doi: 10.1016/s0027-9684(15)31179-2.
To determine if perceptions of interpersonal aspects of care in the emergency department (ED) vary by patient race/ethnicity.
Patients in a tertiary care academic ED responded to a 22-question survey focusing on interpersonal care aspects: affiliation, satisfaction, trust and participation. Scores for each of the four generated scales were compared in terms of race, ethnicity and other basic demographics.
African-American patients demonstrated significantly lower mean scores for trust of healthcare providers than Caucasians and significantly lower levels of participation. African-American race/ethnicity continued to be a significant predictor of lower levels of trust (but not participation) after accounting for age, gender, education, household income, health insurance, healthcare received in last six months and route of referral to the ED.
Preliminary evidence suggests that African Americans may feel less trust toward their ED providers. Understanding this phenomenon and teaching providers how to reduce distrust may translate into better patient compliance/outcomes and reduce healthcare disparities.
确定急诊科(ED)患者对医疗人际方面的认知是否因患者种族/民族而异。
一家三级医疗学术急诊科的患者对一项包含22个问题的调查做出回应,该调查聚焦于人际医疗方面:归属感、满意度、信任和参与度。比较了四个生成量表中每个量表在种族、民族和其他基本人口统计学方面的得分。
非裔美国患者对医疗服务提供者的信任平均得分显著低于白种人,参与度也显著较低。在考虑了年龄、性别、教育程度、家庭收入、医疗保险、过去六个月接受的医疗服务以及转诊至急诊科的途径后,非裔美国人的种族/民族仍然是信任度较低(但不是参与度)的一个重要预测因素。
初步证据表明,非裔美国人可能对其急诊科医护人员的信任度较低。了解这一现象并教导医护人员如何减少不信任感,可能会转化为更好的患者依从性/治疗结果,并减少医疗保健差距。