Differences in the Quality of the Patient–Physician Relationship Among Terminally Ill African-American and White Patients: Impact on Advance Care Planning and Treatment Preferences
- 19 September 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of General Internal Medicine
- Vol. 22 (11) , 1579-1582
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0370-6
Abstract
Little is known about the quality of the patient–physician relationship for terminally ill African Americans. To compare the quality of the patient–physician relationship between African-American and white patients and examine the extent to which relationship quality contributes to differences in advance care planning (ACP) and preferences for intensive life-sustaining treatment (LST). Cross sectional survey of 803 terminally ill African-American and white patients. Patient-reported quality of the patient–physician relationship (degree of trust, perceived respect, and joint decision making; skill in breaking bad news and listening; help in navigating the medical system), ACP, preferences for LST (cardiopulmonary resuscitation, major surgery, mechanical ventilation, and dialysis). The quality of the patient–physician relationship was worse for African Americans than for white patients by all measures except trust. African Americans were less likely to have an ACP (adjusted relative risk [aRR] = 0.66, 95%CI = 0.52–0.84), and were more likely to have a preference for cardiopulmonary resuscitation and dialysis (aRR = 1.28, 95%CI = 1.03–1.58; aRR = 1.25, 95%CI = 1.07–1.47, respectively). Additional adjustment for the quality of the patient–physician relationship had no impact on the differences in ACP and treatment preferences. Lower reported patient–physician relationship quality for African-American patients does not explain the observed differences between African Americans and whites in ACP and preferences for LST.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- Understanding African Americans’ views of the trustworthiness of physiciansJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2006
- Distrust and Poor Self-Reported Health. Canaries in the Coal Mine?Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2006
- End‐of‐Life Care in Black and White: Race Matters for Medical Care of Dying Patients and their FamiliesJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2005
- Easy SAS Calculations for Risk or Prevalence Ratios and DifferencesAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 2005
- Racial and ethnic differences in patient perceptions of bias and cultural competence in health careJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2004
- Barriers to Optimum End‐of‐life Care for Minority PatientsJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2002
- Concise Screening Questions for Clinical Assessments of Terminal Care: The Needs Near the End-of-Life Care Screening ToolJournal of Palliative Medicine, 2001
- Racial variation in the use of do-not-resuscitate ordersJournal of General Internal Medicine, 1999
- Can goals of care be used to predict intervention preferences in an advance directive?Archives of internal medicine (1960), 1997
- Can Goals of Care Be Used to Predict Intervention Preferences in an Advance Directive?Archives of internal medicine (1960), 1997