Saha Somnath, Beach Mary Catherine
Section of General Internal Medicine, VA Portland Health Care System, 3710 SW U.S. Veterans Hospital Rd. (P3HSRD), Portland, OR, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine & Geriatrics, Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Apr;35(4):1084-1091. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-05646-z. Epub 2020 Jan 21.
Studies suggest that black patients have better interactions, on average, with physicians of their own race. Whether this reflects greater "cultural competence" in race-concordant relationships, or other effects of race unrelated to physician behavior, is unclear. It is also unclear if physician race influences patient decision-making.
To determine whether physician race affects patients' ratings of physicians and decision-making, independent of physician behavior.
Randomized study using standardized video vignettes.
Primary care patients with coronary risk factors or disease.
Each participant viewed one of 16 vignettes depicting a physician reviewing cardiac catheterization results and recommending coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. Vignettes varied only in terms of physicians' race, gender, age, and communication style (high vs. low patient-centeredness).
Participants rated the video physician's communication, interpersonal style, competence, trustworthiness, likability, and overall performance (0-4 Likert scales). They also rated the necessity of CABG (0-5 scale) and whether they would undergo CABG or obtain a second opinion if they were the video patient (0-3 scales).
Participants included 107 black and 131 white patients (72% participation rate). Black participants viewing a black (vs. white) video physician gave higher ratings on all physician attributes (e.g., overall rating 3.22 vs. 2.34, p < 0.001) and were more likely to perceive CABG as necessary (4.05 vs. 3.72, p = 0.03) and say they would undergo CABG if they were the video patient (2.43 vs. 2.09, p = 0.004). Patient-centered communication style reduced, but did not eliminate, the impact of race concordance. Physician race was not associated with any outcomes among white patients.
Black patients viewed the doctor in a scripted vignette more positively, and were more receptive to the same recommendation, communicated in the same way, with a black vs. white physician. Patient-centered communication reduced but did not eliminate the effect of physician race.
研究表明,平均而言,黑人患者与同种族医生的互动更好。这是反映了种族匹配关系中更强的“文化胜任力”,还是与医生行为无关的种族的其他影响,尚不清楚。医生的种族是否会影响患者的决策也不清楚。
确定医生的种族是否会影响患者对医生的评分和决策,而不受医生行为的影响。
使用标准化视频短片的随机研究。
患有冠心病危险因素或疾病的初级保健患者。
每位参与者观看16个短片中的一个,短片描绘了一位医生查看心脏导管检查结果并推荐冠状动脉搭桥手术(CABG)。短片仅在医生的种族、性别、年龄和沟通方式(以患者为中心程度高与低)方面有所不同。
参与者对视频中医生的沟通、人际风格、能力、可信度、亲和力和整体表现进行评分(0-4李克特量表)。他们还对冠状动脉搭桥手术的必要性进行评分(0-5量表),以及如果他们是视频中的患者,他们是否会接受冠状动脉搭桥手术或寻求第二种意见(0-3量表)。
参与者包括107名黑人患者和131名白人患者(参与率72%)。观看黑人(与白人)视频医生的黑人参与者对所有医生属性的评分更高(例如,整体评分3.22对2.34,p<0.001),并且更有可能认为冠状动脉搭桥手术是必要的(4.05对3.72,p=0.03),并表示如果他们是视频中的患者,他们会接受冠状动脉搭桥手术(2.43对2.09,p=0.004)。以患者为中心的沟通方式减少了,但并未消除种族匹配的影响。医生的种族与白人患者的任何结果均无关联。
黑人患者对脚本短片中的黑人医生看法更积极,并且对于以相同方式传达的相同建议,相比白人医生,他们更愿意接受。以患者为中心的沟通减少了但并未消除医生种族的影响。