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International patient preferences for physician attire: results from cross-sectional studies in four countries across three continents

Authors :
Nathan Houchens
Sanjay Saint
Christopher Petrilli
Latoya Kuhn
David Ratz
Lindsey De Lott
Marc Zollinger
Hugo Sax
Kazuhiro Kamata
Akira Kuriyama
Yasuharu Tokuda
Carlo Fumagalli
Gianni Virgili
Stefano Fumagalli
Vineet Chopra
Source :
Houchens, Nathan; Saint, Sanjay; Petrilli, Christopher; Kuhn, Latoya; Ratz, David; De Lott, Lindsey; Zollinger, Marc; Sax, Hugo; Kamata, Kazuhiro; Kuriyama, Akira; Tokuda, Yasuharu; Fumagalli, Carlo; Virgili, Gianni; Fumagalli, Stefano; Chopra, Vineet (2022). International patient preferences for physician attire: results from cross-sectional studies in four countries across three continents. BMJ open, 12(10), e061092. BMJ Publishing Group 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061092 , Houchens, N, Saint, S, Petrilli, C, Kuhn, L, Ratz, D, De Lott, L, Zollinger, M, Sax, H, Kamata, K, Kuriyama, A, Tokuda, Y, Fumagalli, C, Virgili, G, Fumagalli, S & Chopra, V 2022, ' International patient preferences for physician attire: results from cross-sectional studies in four countries across three continents ', BMJ Open, vol. 12, no. 10, e061092 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061092
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectiveThe patient–physician relationship impacts patients’ experiences and health outcomes. Physician attire is a form of nonverbal communication that influences this relationship. Prior studies examining attire preferences suffered from heterogeneous measurement and limited context. We thus performed a multicentre, cross-sectional study using a standardised survey instrument to compare patient preferences for physician dress in international settings.Setting20 hospitals and healthcare practices in Italy, Japan, Switzerland and the USA.ParticipantsConvenience sample of 9171 adult patients receiving care in academic hospitals, general medicine clinics, specialty clinics and ophthalmology practices.Primary and secondary outcome measuresThe survey was randomised and included photographs of a male or female physician dressed in assorted forms of attire. The primary outcome measure was attire preference, comprised of composite ratings across five domains: how knowledgeable, trustworthy, caring and approachable the physician appeared, and how comfortable the respondent felt. Secondary outcome measures included variation in preferences by country, physician type and respondent characteristics.ResultsThe highest rated forms of attire differed by country, although each most preferred attire with white coat. Low ratings were conferred on attire extremes (casual and business suit). Preferences were more uniform for certain physician types. For example, among all respondents, scrubs garnered the highest rating for emergency department physicians (44.2%) and surgeons (42.4%). However, attire preferences diverged for primary care and hospital physicians. All types of formal attire were more strongly preferred in the USA than elsewhere. Respondent age influenced preferences in Japan and the USA only.ConclusionsPatients across a myriad of geographies, settings and demographics harbour specific preferences for physician attire. Some preferences are nearly universal, whereas others vary substantially. As a one-size-fits-all dress policy is unlikely to reflect patient desires and expectations, a tailored approach should be sought that attempts to match attire to clinical context.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Houchens, Nathan; Saint, Sanjay; Petrilli, Christopher; Kuhn, Latoya; Ratz, David; De Lott, Lindsey; Zollinger, Marc; Sax, Hugo; Kamata, Kazuhiro; Kuriyama, Akira; Tokuda, Yasuharu; Fumagalli, Carlo; Virgili, Gianni; Fumagalli, Stefano; Chopra, Vineet (2022). International patient preferences for physician attire: results from cross-sectional studies in four countries across three continents. BMJ open, 12(10), e061092. BMJ Publishing Group 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061092 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061092>, Houchens, N, Saint, S, Petrilli, C, Kuhn, L, Ratz, D, De Lott, L, Zollinger, M, Sax, H, Kamata, K, Kuriyama, A, Tokuda, Y, Fumagalli, C, Virgili, G, Fumagalli, S &amp; Chopra, V 2022, &#39; International patient preferences for physician attire: results from cross-sectional studies in four countries across three continents &#39;, BMJ Open, vol. 12, no. 10, e061092 . https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061092
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52eef26b6007fc49346e6e9b92d4b4c2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48350/173464