1. Patient-clinician interactions and disparities in breast cancer care: the equality in breast cancer care study
- Author
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Gonzales, Felisa A, Sangaramoorthy, Meera, Dwyer, Laura A, Shariff-Marco, Salma, Allen, Amani M, Kurian, Allison W, Yang, Juan, Langer, Michelle M, Allen, Laura, Reeve, Bryce B, Taplin, Stephen H, and Gomez, Scarlett Lin
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Breast Cancer ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,7.3 Management and decision making ,Management of diseases and conditions ,Adult ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Breast Neoplasms ,Cancer Survivors ,Female ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,Middle Aged ,Physician-Patient Relations ,Quality of Health Care ,Disparities ,Breast cancer ,Discrimination ,Decision-making ,Mistrust ,Public Health and Health Services ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
PurposeTo examine whether interpersonal aspects of patient-clinician interactions, such as patient-perceived medical discrimination, clinician mistrust, and treatment decision-making contribute to racial/ethnic/educational disparities in breast cancer care.MethodsA telephone interview was administered to 542 Asian/Pacific Islander (API), Black, Hispanic, and White women identified through the Greater Bay Area Cancer Registry, ages 20 and older diagnosed with a first primary invasive breast cancer. Adjusted odds ratios (aOR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated from logistic regression models that assessed associations between race/ethnicity/education, medical discrimination, clinician mistrust, and treatment decision-making with concordance to breast cancer treatment guidelines (guideline-concordant treatment) and perceived quality of care (pQoC).ResultsApproximately three-quarters of women received treatment that was guideline-concordant (76.6%) and reported that their breast cancer care was excellent (72.1%). Non-college-educated Black women had lower odds of guideline-concordant care (aOR (CI) = 0.29 (0.12-0.67)) vs. college-educated White women. Odds of excellent pQoC were lower among the following: college-educated Hispanic women (aOR (CI) = 0.09 (0.02-0.47)) and API women regardless of education (aORs ≤ 0.50) vs. college-educated White women, women reporting low and moderate levels of discrimination (aORs ≤ 0.44) vs. none, and women reporting any clinician mistrust (aOR (CI) = 0.50 (0.29-0.88)) vs. none. Disparities in guideline-concordant care and pQoC persisted after controlling for medical discrimination, clinician mistrust, and decision-making.ConclusionsInterpersonal aspects of the patient-clinician interaction had an impact on pQoC but not receipt of guideline-concordant treatment and did not explain disparities in either outcome.Implications for cancer survivorsAlthough breast cancer survivors' interpersonal interactions with clinicians did not influence receipt of appropriate treatment, intervention strategies to improve patient-clinician relations may help attenuate disparities in survivors' pQoC.
- Published
- 2019