1. Measuring African American Women's Trust in Provider During Pregnancy.
- Author
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Peters, Rosalind M., Benkert, Ramona, Templin, Thomas N., and Cassidy-Bushrow, Andrea E.
- Subjects
ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,BIRTH weight ,LOW birth weight ,BLACK people ,CHI-squared test ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EMPLOYMENT ,FACTOR analysis ,GESTATIONAL age ,GROUP identity ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,INCOME ,PREMATURE infants ,HEALTH insurance ,LITERACY ,RESEARCH methodology ,EVALUATION of medical care ,PATIENT-professional relations ,METROPOLITAN areas ,MIDWIVES ,NURSING specialties ,OBSTETRICS ,PATIENT compliance ,PATIENTS ,PHYSICIANS ,PREGNANCY ,PREGNANT women ,PRENATAL care ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RACISM ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,T-test (Statistics) ,TRUST ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,REPRODUCTIVE history ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation - Abstract
Significant racial disparities exist in pregnancy outcomes, but few researchers have examined the relationship between trust in providers and pregnancy outcomes. The Trust in Physician Scale (TPS), the most widely used tool, has not been tested in pregnancy. We assessed the psychometric properties of the TPS and identified correlates of trust in 189 pregnant African American women. Evidence supports internal consistency reliability (>.85) and internal structure of the TPS (CFI = .97; RMSEA = .05; χ
2 (42) = 65.93, p = .001), but TPS scores did not predict pregnancy outcomes. African American women reported a high level of trust in obstetric providers. Trust did not differ by provider type (physician or midwife) but was related to the women's history of perceived racism and strength of ethnic identity. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
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