Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research, Australian Institute of Health Innovation, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
University of Colorado Denver, School of Medicine, Department of Radiology, Aurora, Colorado; Colorado School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics and Informatics, Aurora, Colorado.
J Am Coll Radiol. 2019 Oct;16(10):1401-1408. doi: 10.1016/j.jacr.2018.12.027. Epub 2019 Mar 2.
To describe patient perceptions related to CT and evaluate variation related to patient sociodemographic characteristics.
Institutional review board-approved survey of adult patients undergoing outpatient CT at a large academic hospital administered May 2016 to March 2017. The survey included questions about participant demographic and socioeconomic characteristics as well as scales that addressed five perceptual constructs related to their CT examination: knowledge, benefits, barriers, expectations, and trust. Two of these constructs use the Health Belief Model as a conceptual framework, and questions were adapted from the Benefits and Barriers Scale for Screening Mammography. Descriptive statistics were calculated for all variables. Heterogeneous choice models were used to evaluate associations between participant characteristics and the perceptual constructs.
In all, 302 surveys were completed by a diverse patient sample (33% non-Hispanic white, 29% Hispanic or Latino, 24% black, 8% mixed or other race, 5% Asian or Pacific Islander, 2% American Indian or Alaska Native). A large majority of participants responded positively to CT examination perceptions for each item with: high knowledge (71%-97%), positive expectations (94%-98%), high trust (92%) and benefits (67%-93%), and low barriers (only 9%-17% reported). In addition, 26% of participants reported seeking information about the CT before their appointment, with calling their physician's office the most common approach. The heterogeneous choice models found that responses to nearly all of the scale questions did not vary by sociodemographic characteristics, although in a larger sample some associations may be significant.
Among a diverse sample of patients, perceptions of CT examination were highly positive and similar according to sociodemographic characteristics.
描述患者对 CT 的认知,并评估与患者社会人口统计学特征相关的差异。
对在一家大型学术医院进行门诊 CT 检查的成年患者进行机构审查委员会批准的调查,调查于 2016 年 5 月至 2017 年 3 月进行。调查包括参与者人口统计学和社会经济特征的问题,以及与他们的 CT 检查相关的五个感知结构的量表:知识、益处、障碍、期望和信任。其中两个结构使用健康信念模型作为概念框架,问题改编自筛查乳房 X 光检查的益处和障碍量表。对所有变量进行描述性统计分析。使用异质选择模型评估参与者特征与感知结构之间的关联。
共有 302 份调查问卷由不同的患者样本完成(33%非西班牙裔白人,29%西班牙裔或拉丁裔,24%黑人,8%混合或其他种族,5%亚洲或太平洋岛民,2%美国印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民)。大多数参与者对 CT 检查的认知呈积极态度,每个项目的回答都很高:知识水平高(71%-97%),期望高(94%-98%),信任度高(92%)和受益程度高(67%-93%),障碍程度低(只有 9%-17%的人报告)。此外,26%的参与者表示在预约前会寻求有关 CT 的信息,其中最常见的方法是打电话给医生办公室。异质选择模型发现,几乎所有量表问题的回答都与社会人口统计学特征无关,尽管在更大的样本中,某些关联可能具有统计学意义。
在一个多样化的患者样本中,对 CT 检查的认知非常积极,并且根据社会人口统计学特征相似。