Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Graduate School of Medicine, Fukushima Medical University, Fukushima, Japan.
Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Showa University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2021 Oct 19;21(1):1122. doi: 10.1186/s12913-021-07172-y.
A family member's negative experiences with medical care have long-term effects on a patient's attitudes and emotions. However, the impact of family members' experiences on patients' trust in their own physicians and in physicians generally is poorly understood. This study aims to quantify these associations.
A cross-sectional online survey involving adults with non-communicable diseases (cardiac disease, diabetes, cancer, depression, and rheumatic disease) was conducted in Japan during April 2020. The main exposure variable was dissatisfaction with the medical care that family members had received. The main outcomes were patients' (N = 661) own trust in their personal physicians and in physicians generally. The study adopted the Japanese version of the Abbreviated Wake Forest Physician Trust Scales. Both 5-item scales (general and individual physician trust) were translated and validated for the study. The total scores were transformed into a scale of 0-100 points. A series of linear mixed-effects models with consideration for clustering effect by prefectures were fit.
The results showed a lower rating for trust in physicians generally as compared to trust in the respondent's personal physician (mean 57.0 vs. 66.4 points; p < 0.001). Furthermore, dissatisfaction with a family member's medical care was associated with lower trust in physicians generally (mean difference - 9.58, 95 %CI -12.4 to -6.76). Interestingly, dissatisfaction with a family member's care was also associated with lower trust in the respondent's personal physician (mean difference - 3.19, 95 %CI -6.02 to -0.36), but the magnitude of this association was weaker. The lower trust in personal physicians may be mediated by reduced trust in physicians generally.
We suggest that physicians enquire about past patients' negative experiences, including dissatisfaction with family members' medical care, to repair hidden loss of trust, when they sense that patients doubt them or physicians generally.
家庭成员对医疗护理的负面体验会对患者的态度和情绪产生长期影响。然而,家庭成员的体验对患者对自己医生和医生整体的信任的影响尚未被充分理解。本研究旨在量化这些关联。
2020 年 4 月,在日本开展了一项涉及患有非传染性疾病(心脏病、糖尿病、癌症、抑郁症和风湿性疾病)的成年人的横断面在线调查。主要暴露变量是对家庭成员所接受的医疗护理的不满。主要结局是患者(N=661)对其个人医生和医生整体的信任。该研究采用了日本版的简式威克森林医师信任量表。两个 5 项量表(一般和个体医生信任)都经过翻译和验证。总得分转换为 0-100 分的量表。采用考虑到都道府县聚类效应的一系列线性混合效应模型进行拟合。
结果显示,与对患者个人医生的信任相比,对医生整体的信任评分较低(平均 57.0 分 vs. 66.4 分;p<0.001)。此外,对家庭成员医疗护理的不满与对医生整体的信任降低有关(平均差异-9.58,95%CI-12.4 至-6.76)。有趣的是,对家庭成员护理的不满也与对患者个人医生的信任降低有关(平均差异-3.19,95%CI-6.02 至-0.36),但这种关联的程度较弱。对个人医生的信任降低可能是对医生整体的信任降低的中介因素。
我们建议,当医生感觉到患者怀疑他们或医生整体时,医生应询问患者过去的负面体验,包括对家庭成员医疗护理的不满,以修复隐藏的信任损失。