1. The Effect of Patient-Centered Communication and Racial Concordant Care on Care Satisfaction Among U.S. Immigrants.
- Author
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Chu, Jun, Wang, Nianyang, Choi, Yoon Soon, and Roby, Dylan H.
- Subjects
PATIENT-centered communication ,PATIENT satisfaction ,IMMIGRANTS ,CROSS-cultural differences ,RACIAL differences ,MEDICAL care ,SATISFACTION ,PATIENT-centered care ,COMMUNICATION - Abstract
Immigrants living in the United States experience disparities in satisfaction with medical care. Practicing patient-centered communication and providing racially (or race-concordant) concordant care are suggested as effective approaches to improve care satisfaction. Using the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, we found that immigrant patients with medical providers who practiced patient-centered communication were more likely to be satisfied with the care they received regardless of patient-provider racial concordance, and that simply having racially concordant medical providers did not significantly affect the satisfaction level for immigrant patients. The findings suggest that providing patient-centered communication may mitigate racial and cultural differences between providers and patients, and is key to reducing disparities and improving immigrant patients' satisfaction level with medical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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