Havranek Edward P, Hanratty Rebecca, Tate Channing, Dickinson L Miriam, Steiner John F, Cohen Geoffrey, Blair Irene A
Department of Medicine, Denver Health Medical Center, Denver, Colorado 80204, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2012 Nov 26;172(21):1662-7. doi: 10.1001/2013.jamainternmed.258.
Communication between African American patients and white health care providers has been shown to be of poorer quality when compared with race-concordant patient-provider communication. Fear on the part of patients that providers stereotype them negatively might be one cause of this poorer communication. This stereotype threat may be lessened by a values-affirmation intervention.
In a blinded experiment, we randomized 99 African American patients with hypertension to perform a values-affirmation exercise or a control exercise before a visit with their primary care provider. We compared patient-provider communication for the 2 groups using audio recordings of the visit analyzed with the Roter Interaction Analysis System. We also evaluated visit satisfaction, trust, stress, and mood after the visit by means of a questionnaire.
Patients in the intervention group requested and provided more information about their medical condition (mean [SE] number of utterances, 66.3 [6.8] in the values-affirmation group vs 48.1 [5.9] in the control group [P = .03]). Patient-provider communication in the intervention group was characterized as being more interested, friendly, responsive, interactive, and respectful (P = .02) and less depressed and distressed (P = .03). Patient questionnaires did not detect differences in visit satisfaction, trust, stress, or mood. Mean visit duration did not differ significantly between the groups (19.2 minutes in the control group vs 20.5 minutes in the intervention group [P = .29]).
A values-affirmation exercise improves aspects of patient-provider communication in race-discordant primary care visits. The clinical impact of the intervention must be defined before widespread implementation can be recommended.
与种族匹配的医患沟通相比,非裔美国患者与白人医疗服务提供者之间的沟通质量较差。患者担心提供者对他们有负面刻板印象可能是沟通较差的一个原因。价值观肯定干预可能会减轻这种刻板印象威胁。
在一项盲法实验中,我们将99名患有高血压的非裔美国患者随机分为两组,一组在与初级保健提供者就诊前进行价值观肯定练习,另一组进行对照练习。我们使用Roter互动分析系统对就诊录音进行分析,比较两组的医患沟通情况。我们还通过问卷调查评估了就诊后的就诊满意度、信任度、压力和情绪。
干预组患者就其病情询问并提供了更多信息(价值观肯定组平均[标准误]话语数为66.3[6.8],对照组为48.1[5.9][P = .03])。干预组的医患沟通表现为更感兴趣、友好、反应积极、互动和尊重(P = .02),且抑郁和苦恼程度更低(P = .03)。患者问卷未发现就诊满意度、信任度、压力或情绪方面的差异。两组的平均就诊时长无显著差异(对照组为19.2分钟,干预组为20.5分钟[P = .29])。
价值观肯定练习可改善种族不匹配的初级保健就诊中医患沟通的各个方面。在推荐广泛实施之前,必须明确该干预措施的临床影响。