Assessing physician/patient relationships in the presence of HIV/AIDS: an exploratory study.

S A Taylor, C Madrigal
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The following study investigates the nature of the relationship between physicians and HIV/AIDS patients within the context of the rapidly evolving services/relationship marketing literatures. The emerging evidence suggests that service providers generally play a critical role in the development of positive consumer attitudes and behaviors, and that relationship marketing practices can contribute to the delivery of health services. However, to date, there appears little evidence supporting the efficacy of employing relationship marketing practices in relation to a target market of HIV/AIDS patients. This exploratory study contributes to the body of knowledge by more closely investigating the nature of the patient-physician relationship relative to HIV/AIDS patients' attitudes, marketing-related behaviors, and overall quality-of-life/life satisfaction judgments. The results of this study first suggest that HIV/AIDS patients use the expectancy disconfirmation model when evaluating the performance of their physician. A reliance on expectancy disconfirmation suggests the likely prevalent role of service quality perceptions and satisfaction judgments in evaluating their relationship with their physician. Second, the results appear to support the conclusion that the patient's evaluation of their physician relationship and subsequent behaviors (e.g., word-of-mouth) are directly related to the patient's general perception of received health services. Thus, the patient/physician relationship may play a particularly powerful role in determining patient (marketing related) outcomes relative to other health service settings. Third, a direct influence is supported between negative affective reactions by patients and subsequent outcome behaviors. This finding lends support for the potential efficacy of service recovery efforts when rendering treatment to HIV/AIDS patients. Finally, evidence is presented demonstrating the effect of positive perceptions of the patient/provider relationship on these patients' overall evaluation of their quality-of-life/life satisfaction. The managerial and research implications of this study are presented and discussed.

评估存在HIV/AIDS的医患关系:一项探索性研究。
在快速发展的服务/关系营销文献背景下,以下研究调查了医生与HIV/AIDS患者之间关系的本质。新出现的证据表明,服务提供者通常在培养积极的消费者态度和行为方面发挥关键作用,关系营销做法可有助于提供保健服务。然而,到目前为止,似乎没有证据支持在艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者的目标市场中采用关系营销实践的有效性。本探索性研究通过更密切地调查与HIV/AIDS患者态度、营销相关行为和整体生活质量/生活满意度判断相关的医患关系的性质,为知识体系做出贡献。本研究的结果首次表明,HIV/AIDS患者在评估其医生的表现时使用期望不确认模型。对期望不确认的依赖表明,在评估他们与医生的关系时,服务质量感知和满意度判断可能普遍起作用。其次,研究结果似乎支持以下结论,即患者对其医生关系的评价和随后的行为(例如,口碑)与患者对所接受的卫生服务的总体看法直接相关。因此,相对于其他卫生服务环境,医患关系在决定患者(与市场营销相关)结果方面可能起着特别重要的作用。第三,患者的负面情感反应与后续结果行为之间存在直接影响。这一发现支持了在对艾滋病毒/艾滋病患者进行治疗时服务恢复工作的潜在功效。最后,证据显示,积极的感知病人/提供者的关系对这些病人的整体评价,他们的生活质量/生活满意度的影响。提出并讨论了本研究的管理和研究意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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