患者种族、社会经济地位、住院医师性别、专科对预防筛查的影响。

Seminars in medical practice Pub Date : 2008-01-01
Arshiya A Baig, Michele Heisler
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:卫生保健差距仍然在很大程度上无法解释,需要更好地了解和解决。关于住院医师是否根据种族或社会经济地位(SES)对患者进行不同筛查,我们知之甚少。本研究的目的是评估住院医生的预防性筛查实践是否受到患者种族、社会经济地位或住院医生性别、专业、少数民族身份或培训年限的影响。设计:横断面调查。方法:来自一家大型学术医疗中心6个专业的住院医师参与了一项在线调查,以评估他们对初级保健筛查的知识、态度和实践。该调查包括4个临床小插曲中的1个,这些小插曲因患者的种族和社会地位而异(非裔美国人或高加索人;高收入或低收入),然后是关于9个常规筛查领域的问题。收集了居民人口统计数据、患者种族和社会经济地位,并使用双变量和多变量分析来评估患者和/或居民特征与居民报告的筛查重要性之间的关联,以及筛查小患者9种特定健康风险的意愿。结果:在309名居民中,有167人回复,回复率为54%。9个筛查领域中的4个(性行为、体育活动、抑郁、饮食)被居民报告为“非常重要”(相对于“不太重要”)和“在就诊时肯定会问”(相对于“肯定不会问”)。在调整后的几率模型中,居民在抑郁、饮食、体育活动或性行为筛查方面没有表现出种族偏好。与低收入患者相比,住院医生更不可能报告他们会筛查高收入患者的性行为(调整优势比[OR], 0.46[95%可信区间{CI}, 0.21-0.99])。女性居民比男性居民更有可能报告他们会筛查性行为(调整后的OR为3.79 [95% CI, 1.69-8.52])。与所有其他专科的住院医师相比,急诊医师较少筛查性行为(调整后的OR为0.36 [95% CI, 0.14-0.95])和身体活动(调整后的OR为0.27 [95% CI, 0.10-0.73])。结论:筛查高危性行为的意愿因患者的社会经济地位、住院医师的性别和专科而有显著差异。未来的研究应该检查如何在每个住院医师项目的课程中进行预防性筛查,以确保患者在住院医师评估时接受适当和一致的筛查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Influence of Patient Race and Socioeconomic Status and Resident Physician Gender and Specialty on Preventive Screening.

OBJECTIVE: Health care disparities remain largely unexplained and need to be better understood to be addressed. Little is known about whether resident physicians screen patients differently based on race or socioeconomic status (SES). The objective of this study was to assess whether residents' preventive screening practices are influenced by patient race or SES or by resident gender, specialty, minority status, or years of training. DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. METHODS: Residents from 6 specialties at a large academic medical center participated in an online survey to gauge their knowledge, attitudes, and practices pertaining to primary care screening. The survey consisted of 1 of 4 clinical vignettes that varied by patient race and SES (African-American or Caucasian; high income or low income), followed by questions pertaining to 9 routine screening areas. Resident demographics and patient race and SES were compiled, and bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to assess associations between patient and/or resident characteristics and residents' reported importance of screening as well as intention to screen the vignette patient for the 9 specified health risks. RESULTS: Of 309 residents sent the online survey, 167 responded (response rate, 54%). Four of the 9 screening areas (sexual behavior, physical activity, depression, diet) were reported by residents as both "very important" (versus "not very important") and "would definitely ask about during an office visit" (versus "would not definitely ask about"). In the adjusted odds models, residents showed no racial preference in intention to screen for depression, diet, physical activity, or sexual behavior. Residents were less likely to report that they would screen the high-income patient for sexual behavior compared with the low-income patient (adjusted odds ratio [OR], 0.46 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 0.21-0.99]). Female residents were more likely than male residents to report that they would screen for sexual behavior (adjusted OR, 3.79 [95% CI, 1.69-8.52]). Emergency medicine residents were less likely to screen for sexual behavior (adjusted OR, 0.36 [95% CI, 0.14-0.95]) and for physical activity (adjusted OR, 0.27 [95% CI, 0.10-0.73]) than residents from all other specialties. CONCLUSION: Intention to screen for high-risk sexual behavior varied significantly by patient SES and by resident gender and specialty. Future research should examine how preventive screening is addressed in the curriculum of each residency program to ensure that patients will receive appropriate and consistent screening when evaluated by resident physicians.

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