학술논문

The Predictors of Patient–Physician Race and Ethnic Concordance: A Medical Facility Fixed‐Effects Approach
Document Type
article
Source
Health Services Research. 45(3)
Subject
Clinical Research
Adult
African Americans
Asian Americans
California
Choice Behavior
Diabetes Mellitus
Female
Health Maintenance Organizations
Healthcare Disparities
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Logistic Models
Male
Middle Aged
Multilingualism
Multivariate Analysis
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Whites
Workforce
Racial
ethnic differences in health and health care
health work force
distribution
White People
Black or African American
Asian
Public Health and Health Services
Policy and Administration
Health Policy & Services
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveTo examine the predictors of patient-physician race/ethnicity concordance among diabetes patients in an integrated delivery system.Data sourceKaiser Permanente's Northern California Diabetes Registry of 2005.Study designLogistic regression predicted concordance for each racial/ethnic group. Availability of a concordant physician, whether a patient chose their physician, and patient language were main explanatory variables.Data collection/extraction methodsThe study population consisted of 109,745 patients and 1,750 physicians.Principal findingsPatients who chose their physicians were more likely to have a same race/ethnicity physician with OR of 2.2 (95 percent CI 1.74-2.82) for African American patients, 1.71 (95 percent CI 1.44-2.04) for Hispanic patients, 1.11 (95 percent CI 1.04-1.18) for white patients, and 1.38 (95 percent CI 1.23, 1.55) for Asian patients. Availability of a same race/ethnicity physician was also a predictor of concordance for African American patients (OR 2.7; 95 percent CI 2.45-2.98) and marginally significant for Hispanic patients (OR 1.02; 95 percent CI 1.01-1.02), white patients (OR 1.02; 95 percent CI 1.00-1.04), and Asian patients (OR 1.05; 95 percent CI 1.03, 1.07). Limited English language was a strong predictor of concordance for Hispanic patients (OR 4.81; 95 percent CI 4.2-5.51) and Asian patients (OR 9.8; 95 percent CI 7.7, 12.6).ConclusionPatient language, preferences, and the racial composition of the physician workforce predict race/ethnicity concordance.