Department of Interior Architecture and Design, School of Communication, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
School of Communication, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL, USA.
HERD. 2024 Jan;17(1):112-126. doi: 10.1177/19375867231204979. Epub 2023 Oct 31.
This study examines the impact of ambulatory waiting room characteristics on patients' emotional states and investigates whether these states are universally experienced or influenced by social and cultural factors among women aged 18-35 from the three largest demographic groups in the United States: Black, Hispanic/Latina, and White.
Patients typically spend more time waiting for routine medical appointments than receiving care, and evidence suggests that waiting can reinforces power dynamics that benefit privileged groups, leading to different experiences for minority women seeking preventative care. Still, literature addressing the impact of waiting areas is largely limited to universal measures, and little is known about how different ethnic/race groups respond to waiting spaces.
This inquiry used a questionnaire assessing 15 waiting room characteristics and testing four variables (furniture arrangement, room-scale, color saturation, and quantity of positive distractions) in a 2 × 3 quasiexperiment using a fractional randomized block design with 24 waiting room images.
Responses from 1,114 participants revealed mutual preferences for sociopetal seating, positive distractions, neutral colors, and welcoming and calming environments. Yet, Black participants indicated significantly greater importance in seeing ethnically/racially similar patients and healthcare providers and strategies that promote transparency, including image-based provider directories and views into the clinic.
By investigating the impact of the waiting room environment on patient affect and comparing perceptions across three demographic groups of women, this study offers insights into potential strategies for improving access to preventative care services by creating more welcoming ambulatory care waiting environments.
本研究考察了门诊候诊室特征对患者情绪状态的影响,并调查了这些状态是否普遍存在,或者是否受到来自美国三个最大人群(黑人、西班牙裔/拉丁裔和白人)中 18-35 岁女性的社会和文化因素的影响。
患者通常在等待常规医疗预约的时间比接受护理的时间更长,有证据表明,等待会强化有利于特权群体的权力动态,导致寻求预防性护理的少数族裔女性有不同的体验。尽管如此,关于等候区影响的文献主要限于通用措施,对于不同族裔/种族群体对等候空间的反应知之甚少。
本研究使用问卷评估了 15 个候诊室特征,并使用 24 个候诊室图像的 2×3 准实验性分块随机设计,测试了四个变量(家具布置、房间规模、颜色饱和度和积极干扰的数量)。
来自 1114 名参与者的回应表明,他们对社交型座位、积极干扰、中性颜色以及温馨和宁静的环境具有共同偏好。然而,黑人参与者表示,看到种族相似的患者和医疗保健提供者以及促进透明度的策略(包括基于图像的提供者目录和对诊所的看法)非常重要。
通过调查候诊室环境对患者情绪的影响,并比较三个女性人口群体的感知,本研究为通过创建更受欢迎的门诊护理等候环境来改善预防性护理服务的可及性提供了策略。