Asian-American patient ratings of physician primary care performance
Taira, Deborah A. ; Safran, Dana Gelb ; Seto, Todd B. ; Rogers, William H. ; Kosinski, Mark ; Ware, John E. Jr. ; Lieberman, Naomi ; Tarlov, Alvin R.
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Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
Academic Program
UMass Chan Affiliations
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Keywords
Adult
African Americans
Asian Americans
Attitude to Health
Boston
Cross-Sectional Studies
European Continental Ancestry Group
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Family Practice
Female
Health Care Surveys
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Satisfaction
Physician-Patient Relations
Primary Health Care
Quality of Health Care
Retrospective Studies
Risk Assessment
Biostatistics
Epidemiology
Health Services Research
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Embargo Expiration Date
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine how Asian-American patients' ratings of primary care performance differ from those of whites. Latinos, and African-Americans.
DESIGN: Retrospective analyses of data collected in a cross-sectional study using patient questionnaires.
SETTING: University hospital primary care group practice.
PARTICIPANTS: In phase 1, successive patients who visited the study site for appointments were asked to complete the survey. In phase 2, successive patients were selected who had most recently visited each physician, going back as far as necessary to obtain 20 patients for each physician. In total, 502 patients were surveyed, 5% of whom were Asian-American.
MAIN RESULTS: After adjusting for potential confounders, Asian-Americans rated overall satisfaction and 10 of 11 scales assessing primary care significantly lower than whites did. Dimensions of primary care that were assessed include access, comprehensiveness of care, integration, continuity, clinical quality, interpersonal treatment, and trust. There were no differences for the scale of longitudinal continuity. On average, the rating scale scores of Asian-Americans were 12 points lower than those of whites (on 100-point scales).
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that Asian-American patients rate physicians primary care performance lower than do whites, African-Americans, and Latinos. Future research needs to focus on Asian-Americans to determine the generalizability of these findings and the extent to which they reflect differences in survey response tendencies or actual quality differences.
Source
J Gen Intern Med. 1997 Apr;12(4):237-42. Link to article on publisher's site