患者体重指数、体重调整建议及不可调整因素对患者满意度的影响。

J. Wells, Miles Batty, H. Box, P. Nakonezny
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引用次数: 0

摘要

患者满意度在医疗保健中扮演着越来越重要的角色。多个不可改变的患者因素已被发现影响患者满意度。然而,据我们所知,还没有研究调查过身体质量指数(BMI)对满意度得分的影响。本研究的目的是评估BMI和医生对患者体重调整的建议是否与患者满意度相关。方法:我们回顾了2010年11月至2017年5月间某学术骨科中心3044例临床就诊的Press Ganey患者满意度调查得分。记录手术前的多种患者因素、BMI、减肥建议或减肥要求。患者满意度被操作化为完全满意或不完全满意的二元结果,并使用多元逻辑回归来估计从潜在预测因子子集中完全满意的几率。结果白人患者(优势比[OR] = 1.340, 95%可信区间[CI]: 1.113 ~ 1.584, P = 0.0007)和医疗保险患者(OR = 1.260, 95% CI: 1.044 ~ 1.521, P = 0.0164)完全满意的可能性更高,而首次就诊的患者完全满意的可能性更低(OR = 0.728, 95% CI: 0.626 ~ 0.847, P < 0.0001)。BMI、减肥建议和术前体重调整要求与患者满意度无关。讨论:患者的BMI、医生的减肥建议或手术要求都与患者满意度无关。种族、保险状况和以前与护理提供者的访问被确定为影响患者满意度的不可改变的患者因素。证据等级:III级。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of Patient Body Mass Index, Recommendation for Weight Modification, and Nonmodifiable Factors on Patient Satisfaction.
INTRODUCTION Patient satisfaction serves an increasingly important role in health care. Multiple nonmodifiable patient factors have been found to influence patient satisfaction. To the best of our knowledge, however, no study has investigated the influence of body mass index (BMI) on satisfaction scores. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether BMI and provider recommendation for patient weight modification were associated with patient satisfaction. METHODS We reviewed Press Ganey patient satisfaction survey scores from 3,044 clinical encounters in an academic orthopaedic center between November 2010 and May 2017. Multiple patient factors, BMI, and recommendation for weight loss, or requirement of weight loss, before surgery were recorded. Patient satisfaction was operationalized as a binary outcome of completely satisfied or not completely satisfied, and multiple logistic regression was used to estimate the odds of being completely satisfied from the subset of potential predictors. RESULTS White patients (odds ratio [OR] = 1.340, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.113 to 1.584, P = 0.0007) and Medicare-insured patients (OR = 1.260, 95% CI: 1.044 to 1.521, P = 0.0164) were more likely to be completely satisfied, whereas patients being seen by a provider for the first time were less likely to be completely satisfied (OR = 0.728, 95% CI: 0.626 to 0.847, P < 0.0001). BMI, recommendation for weight loss, and requirement of weight modification before surgery were not found to be associated with patient satisfaction. DISCUSSION Neither patient BMI nor provider recommendation for weight loss, or as a requirement for surgery, was associated with patient satisfaction. Race, insurance status, and previous visits with the care provider were identified as nonmodifiable patient factors that influence patient satisfaction. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE Level III.
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