Department of Oncology, Wayne State University, Karmanos Cancer Institute, United States.
Department of Oncology, Wayne State University, Karmanos Cancer Institute, United States.
Soc Sci Med. 2017 Oct;191:99-108. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.08.034. Epub 2017 Aug 30.
Both physician and patient race-related beliefs and attitudes are contributors to racial healthcare disparities, but only the former have received substantial research attention. Using data from a study conducted in the Midwestern US from 2012 to 2014, we investigated whether 114 Black cancer patients' existing race-related beliefs and attitudes would predict how they and 18 non-Black physicians (medical oncologists) would respond in subsequent clinical interactions.
At least two days before interacting with an oncologist for initial discussions of treatment options, patients completed measures of perceived past discrimination, general mistrust of physicians, and suspicion of healthcare systems; interactions were video-recorded. Measures from each interaction included patients' verbal behavior (e.g., level of verbal activity), patients' evaluations of physicians (e.g., trustworthiness), patients' perceptions of recommended treatments (e.g., confidence in treatment), physicians' evaluations of patient personal attributes (e.g., intelligence) and physicians' expectations for patient treatment success (e.g., adherence).
As predicted, patients' race-related beliefs and attitudes differed in their associations with patient and physician responses to the interactions. Higher levels of perceived past discrimination predicted more patient verbal activity. Higher levels of mistrust also predicted less patient positive affect and more negative evaluations of physicians. Higher levels of suspicion predicted more negative evaluations of physicians and recommended treatments. Stronger patient race-related attitudes were directly or indirectly associated with lower physician perceptions of patient attributes and treatment expectations.
Results provide new evidence for the role of Black patients' race-related beliefs and attitudes in racial healthcare disparities and suggest the need to measure multiple beliefs and attitudes to identify these effects.
医生和患者的种族相关信念和态度是造成种族医疗保健差异的因素,但前者仅受到大量研究关注。本研究使用了 2012 年至 2014 年在美国中西部进行的一项研究的数据,调查了 114 名黑人癌症患者的现有种族相关信念和态度是否会预测他们和 18 名非黑人医生(肿瘤内科医生)在随后的临床互动中如何反应。
在与肿瘤内科医生进行初始治疗方案讨论之前至少两天,患者完成了对过去经历的歧视感知、对医生的普遍不信任以及对医疗保健系统的怀疑的测量;互动过程被录像记录。每次互动的测量指标包括患者的言语行为(例如,言语活动的水平)、患者对医生的评价(例如,可信赖性)、患者对推荐治疗方案的看法(例如,对治疗的信心)、医生对患者个人属性的评价(例如,智力)以及医生对患者治疗成功的期望(例如,治疗依从性)。
正如预测的那样,患者的种族相关信念和态度与患者和医生对互动的反应之间的关联有所不同。感知到的过去歧视程度越高,患者的言语活动越多。不信任程度越高,患者的积极情绪越少,对医生的评价越负面。怀疑程度越高,对医生和推荐治疗方案的评价越负面。更强的患者种族相关态度直接或间接地与医生对患者属性和治疗期望的感知较低有关。
研究结果为黑人群体患者的种族相关信念和态度在种族医疗保健差异中的作用提供了新证据,并表明需要测量多种信念和态度来识别这些影响。