Schutt Russell K, Cruz Elizabeth Riley, Woodford Mary Lou
Department of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA 02125, USA.
Women Health. 2008;48(3):283-302. doi: 10.1080/03630240802463475.
Satisfaction is a critical outcome for the healthcare system and an important influence on subsequent interactions with that system, yet findings have been inconsistent. This paper examined satisfaction as a multidimensional construct and focused on the interrelated influences of ethnicity and language, the potential confounding effects of economic resources and health status, and the possible role of perceived barriers to service delivery.
The study was based on a phone survey conducted in 2005 of a stratified random sample of 207 Massachusetts patients in the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program, which used case managers to increase the rates of diagnostic testing among uninsured women at risk of breast or cervical cancer. Ethnicity, primary language, economic resources, and health status were each related to particular dimensions of patient satisfaction, but mostly independent of perceived barriers to program participation.
The findings indicated that adequate evaluation of public health programs must conceptualize and measure satisfaction as multidimensional and supported the prediction of "segmented assimilation theory" that satisfaction can decline with time in the U.S.
满意度是医疗保健系统的关键成果,并且对后续与该系统的互动有着重要影响,但研究结果并不一致。本文将满意度视为一个多维概念,并重点关注种族和语言的相互影响、经济资源和健康状况的潜在混杂效应,以及服务提供方面感知障碍的可能作用。
该研究基于2005年对马萨诸塞州207名参加国家乳腺癌和宫颈癌早期检测项目的患者进行的分层随机电话调查,该项目利用个案管理员提高未参保的有乳腺癌或宫颈癌风险的女性的诊断检测率。种族、主要语言、经济资源和健康状况分别与患者满意度的特定维度相关,但大多与参与项目的感知障碍无关。
研究结果表明,对公共卫生项目进行充分评估必须将满意度概念化为多维并进行测量,并支持“分段同化理论”的预测,即在美国,满意度可能会随着时间下降。