Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Center for Financing, Access and Cost Trends, Rockville, MD, USA.
Department of Sociology, Clark University, Worcester, MA, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Apr;36(4):888-893. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-06391-z. Epub 2021 Feb 9.
Asians are the fastest-growing racial/ethnic minority group in the USA and many face communication barriers when seeking health care. Given that a high proportion of Asians are immigrants and have limited English proficiency, poor patient-provider communication may explain Asians' relatively low ratings of care. Though Asians are linguistically, economically, and culturally heterogeneous, research on health care disparities typically combines Asians into a single racial/ethnic category.
To estimate racial/ethnic differences in perceptions of provider communication among the six largest Asian subgroups.
Using a nationally representative sample of adults from the 2014-2017 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (N = 136,836, round-specific response rates range from 72% to 98%), we estimate racial/ethnic differences in perceptions of provider communication, adjusted for English proficiency, immigration status, and sociodemographic characteristics.
The main dependent variable is a 4-item scale ranging from 0 to 100 measuring how positively patients view their health care providers' communication, adapted from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS©) program. Respondents report how often their providers explain things clearly, show respect, listen carefully, and spend enough time with them.
Asians, overall, had less positive perceptions of their providers' communication than either Whites or Latinxs. However, only Chinese-White differences remained after differences in English proficiency and immigration status were controlled (difference = - 2.67, 95% CI - 4.83, - 0.51). No other Asian subgroup differed significantly from Whites.
Negative views of provider communication are not pervasive among all Asians but, rather, primarily reflect the perceptions of Chinese and, possibly, Vietnamese patients. Researchers, policymakers, health plan executives, and others who produce or use data on patients' experiences with health care should, if possible, avoid categorizing all Asians into a single group.
亚洲人是美国增长最快的种族/民族群体,许多人在寻求医疗保健时面临沟通障碍。鉴于亚洲人中很大一部分是移民,并且英语水平有限,因此较差的医患沟通可能解释了亚洲人对护理的评价相对较低的原因。尽管亚洲人在语言、经济和文化上存在差异,但有关医疗保健差异的研究通常将亚洲人归为一个单一的种族/民族类别。
估计六个最大的亚裔亚群体对提供者沟通的看法存在种族/民族差异。
利用来自 2014-2017 年医疗支出面板调查(N=136836,特定轮次的响应率范围从 72%到 98%)的全国代表性成年人样本,我们根据英语熟练程度、移民身份和社会人口统计学特征,估计了对提供者沟通的看法存在种族/民族差异。
主要因变量是一个 4 项评分,范围从 0 到 100,用于衡量患者对医疗保健提供者沟通的积极看法,该评分改编自医疗保健提供者和系统消费者评估(CAHPS©)计划。受访者报告他们的提供者解释清楚、表示尊重、仔细倾听和与他们共度足够时间的频率。
总体而言,与白人或拉丁裔相比,亚洲人对其提供者的沟通评价较低。然而,在控制英语熟练程度和移民身份的差异后,仅保留了华裔和白人之间的差异(差异= -2.67,95%CI -4.83,-0.51)。没有其他亚裔亚群体与白人有显著差异。
对提供者沟通的负面看法并不是所有亚洲人都普遍存在,而是主要反映了中国和可能是越南患者的看法。研究人员、政策制定者、医疗保健计划管理人员和其他编写或使用有关患者医疗保健体验数据的人员,如果可能的话,应避免将所有亚洲人归为一个单一的群体。