Racial/Ethnic Differences in Physician Distrust in the United States
Top Cited Papers
- 1 July 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 97 (7) , 1283-1289
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2005.080762
Abstract
Objectives. We examined the racial/ethnic and geographic variation in distrust of physicians in the United States. Methods. We obtained data from the Community Tracking Study, analyzing 20 sites where at least 5% of the population was Hispanic and 5% was Black. Results. In univariate analyses, Blacks and Hispanics reported higher levels of physician distrust than did Whites. Multivariate analyses, however, suggested a complex interaction among sociodemographic variables, city of residence, race/ethnicity, and distrust of physician. In general, lower socioeconomic status (defined as lower income, lower education, and no health insurance) was associated with higher levels of distrust, with men generally reporting more distrust than women. But the strength of these effects was modified by race/ethnicity. We present examples of individual cities in which Blacks reported consistently higher mean levels of distrust than did Whites, consistently lower mean levels of distrust than did Whites, or a mixed relationship dependent on socioeconomic status. In the same cities, Hispanics reported either consistently higher mean levels of distrust relative to Whites or a mixed relationship. Conclusions. Racial/ethnic differences in physician distrust are less uniform than previously hypothesized, with substantial geographic and individual variation present.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Confidence of Mexican Americans in Major Institutions in the United StatesHispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2003
- Trust and Satisfaction With Physicians, Insurers, and the Medical ProfessionMedical Care, 2003
- Race and Trust in the Health Care SystemPublic Health Reports®, 2003
- Is the Prevalence of Gatekeeping in a Community Associated With Individual Trust in Medical Care?Medical Care, 2003
- Trust in Physicians and Medical Institutions: What Is It, Can It Be Measured, and Does It Matter?The Milbank Quarterly, 2001
- Barriers to Acute Stroke Therapy and Stroke Prevention in Mexican AmericansStroke, 2001
- Patients’ trust in physicians: Many theories, few measures, and little dataJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2000
- Further Validation and Reliability Testing of the Trust in Physician ScaleMedical Care, 1999
- Sex roles as variables in preventive health behaviorJournal of Community Health, 1977
- The Potential Impact of Sexual Equality on HealthNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977