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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 11/2009

01.11.2009 | Original Article

Influence of Patient Race on Physician Prescribing Decisions: A Randomized On-Line Experiment

verfasst von: Saif S. Rathore, MPH, Jonathan D. Ketcham, PhD, G. Caleb Alexander, MD, MS, Andrew J. Epstein, PhD MPP

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 11/2009

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ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND

Prior research reports black patients have lower medication use for hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, and diabetes.

OBJECTIVE

To assess whether patient race influences physicians’ prescribing.

DESIGN

Web-based survey including three clinical vignettes (hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, diabetes), with patient race (black, white) randomized across vignettes.

SUBJECTS

A total of 716 respondents from 5,141 eligible sampled primary care physicians (14% response rate).

INTERVENTIONS

None

MEASUREMENTS

Medication recommendation (any medication vs none, on-patent branded vs generic, and therapeutic class) and physicians’ treatment adherence forecast (10-point Likert scale, 1—definitely not adhere, 10—definitely adhere).

RESULTS

Respondents randomized to view black patients (n = 371) and white patients (n = 345) recommend any medications at comparable rates for hypercholesterolemia (100.0% white vs 99.5% black, P = 0.50), hypertension (99.7% white vs 99.5% black, P = 1.00), and diabetes (99.7% white vs 99.7% black, P = 1.00). Patient race influenced medication class chosen in the hypertension vignette; respondents randomized to view black patients recommended calcium channel blockers more often (20.8% black vs 3.2% white) and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors less often (47.4% black vs 62.6% white) (P < 0.001). Patient race did not influence medication class for hypercholesterolemia or diabetes. Respondents randomized to view black patients reported lower forecasted patient adherence for hypertension (P < 0.001, mean: 7.3 black vs 7.7 white) and diabetes (P = 0.05 mean: 7.4 black vs 7.6 white), but race had no meaningful influence on forecasted adherence for hypercholesterolemia (P = 0.15, mean: 7.2 black vs 7.3 white).

CONCLUSION

Racial differences in outpatient prescribing patterns for hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, and diabetes are likely attributable to factors other than prescribing decisions based on patient race.
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Metadaten
Titel
Influence of Patient Race on Physician Prescribing Decisions: A Randomized On-Line Experiment
verfasst von
Saif S. Rathore, MPH
Jonathan D. Ketcham, PhD
G. Caleb Alexander, MD, MS
Andrew J. Epstein, PhD MPP
Publikationsdatum
01.11.2009
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 11/2009
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-009-1077-7

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