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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 9/2020

06.07.2020 | Original Research

The Association Between Physician Race/Ethnicity and Patient Satisfaction: an Exploration in Direct to Consumer Telemedicine

verfasst von: Kathryn A. Martinez, PhD, MPH, Kaitlin Keenan, BS, Radhika Rastogi, BA, Joud Roufael, MPH, Adrianne Fletcher, PhD, MSSA, LCSW, Mark N. Rood, MD, Michael B. Rothberg, MD, MPH

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 9/2020

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Abstract

Background

Patient satisfaction measures have important implications for physicians. Patient bias against non-White physicians may impact physician satisfaction ratings, but this has not been widely studied.

Objective

To assess differences in patient satisfaction by physician race/ethnicity.

Design

A cross-sectional observational study.

Participants

Patients seeking care on a large nationwide direct to consumer telemedicine platform between July 2016 and July 2018 and their physicians.

Main Measures

Patient satisfaction was ascertained immediately following the encounter on scales of 1 to 5 stars and scored two ways: (1) top-box satisfaction (5 stars versus fewer) and (2) dissatisfaction (2 or fewer stars versus 3 or more). To approximate the information patients would use to make assumptions about physician race/ethnicity, four reviewers classified physicians into categories based on physician name and photo. These included White American, Black American, South Asian, Middle Eastern, Hispanic, and East Asian. Mixed effects logistic regression was used to assess differences in patient top-box satisfaction and patient dissatisfaction by physician race/ethnicity, controlling for patient characteristics, prescription receipt, physician specialty, and whether the physician trained in the USA versus internationally.

Key Results

The sample included 119,016 encounters with 390 physicians. Sixty percent were White American, 14% South Asian, 7% Black American, 7% Hispanic, 6% Middle Eastern, and 6% East Asian. Encounters with South Asian physicians (aOR 0.70; 95% CI 0.54–0.91) and East Asian physicians (aOR 0.72; 95% CI 0.53–0.99) were significantly less likely than those with White American physicians to result in top-box satisfaction. Compared to encounters with White American physicians, those with Black American physicians (aOR 1.72; 95% CI 1.12–2.64), South Asian physicians (aOR 1.77; 95% CI 1.23–2.56), and East Asian physicians (aOR 2.10; 95% CI 1.38–3.20) were more likely to result in patient dissatisfaction.

Conclusions

In our study, patients reported lower satisfaction with some groups of non-White American physicians, which may have implications for their compensation, professional reputation, and job satisfaction.
Literatur
23.
Zurück zum Zitat Dunsch F, Evans DK, Macis M, Wang Q. Bias in patient satisfaction surveys: a threat to measuring healthcare quality. BMJ Glob Health. 2018;3(2):e000694.CrossRef Dunsch F, Evans DK, Macis M, Wang Q. Bias in patient satisfaction surveys: a threat to measuring healthcare quality. BMJ Glob Health. 2018;3(2):e000694.CrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
The Association Between Physician Race/Ethnicity and Patient Satisfaction: an Exploration in Direct to Consumer Telemedicine
verfasst von
Kathryn A. Martinez, PhD, MPH
Kaitlin Keenan, BS
Radhika Rastogi, BA
Joud Roufael, MPH
Adrianne Fletcher, PhD, MSSA, LCSW
Mark N. Rood, MD
Michael B. Rothberg, MD, MPH
Publikationsdatum
06.07.2020
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 9/2020
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06005-8

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