1 / 19

University of Hawai‘i at Manoa Department of Public Health Sciences, JABSOM Hyun-Hee Heo, MA

The Role of Response Efficacy on the Relationship between Cultural Orientation and Decision-Making Preference in the Patient-Physician Communication. University of Hawai‘i at Manoa Department of Public Health Sciences, JABSOM Hyun-Hee Heo, MA. * Preliminary. Does Patient Involvement matter?.

dante
Download Presentation

University of Hawai‘i at Manoa Department of Public Health Sciences, JABSOM Hyun-Hee Heo, MA

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Role of Response Efficacy on the Relationship between Cultural Orientation and Decision-Making Preference in the Patient-Physician Communication University of Hawai‘i at Manoa Department of Public Health Sciences, JABSOM Hyun-Hee Heo, MA * Preliminary

  2. Does Patient Involvement matter? • Increasing patient involvement in health care via consensus-seeking and negotiation improves patient satisfaction and outcomes.

  3. Theoretical Background • Patients who desire to get involved in the process of medical decision-making must overcome the high level of power distance . • Social cognitive theory may be applicable in the context of patient-physician communication • The patients’ beliefs about their participation (response efficacy) will enable patients to choose preferred decision-making strategies.

  4. Rationale • As power distance between patients and physicians enlarge, patients’ confidence in effectively communicating with physicians (i.e., response efficacy) in the process of decision-making may decrease. • The patients’ confidence in the process of decision-making positively affects patients’ preference for participatory decision-making, whereas it negatively affects patients’ preferences for physician only decision-making.

  5. Hypotheses • H1: The higher the power distance, the lower the level of response efficacy in patient-physician relationship. • H2: The higher the level of response efficacy, the higher the level of joint decision-making by patient and physician. • H3: The higher the level of response efficacy, the lower the level of physician only decision-making.

  6. Measures • Power distance • Modified from Dorfman and Howell’s article (1988) • 5 items (α=.66) • * χ² (5) = 16.36, p =.006; GFI=.96; CFI=.86 • Patients’ beliefs of Participation (Response Efficacy) • Modified from Kim et al.’s article (2000) • 8 items (α=.79) • * χ² (20) = 102.96, p <.001; GFI=.83; CFI=.80

  7. Measures, cont’d. Preference for Participation in Medical Decision-Making : Smith et al. (1994) Physician only decision-making 5 items (α=.70) * χ² (5) = 5.41, p =.37; GFI=.98; CFI=1.00 • Joint decision-making by physician and patient • 6 items (α=.88) * χ² (9) = 18.04, p =.04; GFI=.96; CFI=.98

  8. Demographics (n=135) • Sex: Female (57%) • Age : M =23.7, SD = 7.73 (College students) • Ethnicity

  9. Background Information • How many days each year do you visit a physician? • dfafd

  10. Background Information, cont’d. • How often have you visited the physician in the last 30 days? • dfafd

  11. Background Information, cont’d. • The problem(s) that usually make you visit a physician

  12. Descriptive Statistics and Correlations Note. *p <.05 ; **p <.01.

  13. Theoretical Path Model Joint Patient-physician − + − Power Distance Response Efficacy − + Physician 13

  14. Path Analysis Joint Patient-physician −.07 .51* −.40* Power Distance Response Efficacy .03 .53* Physician Note. *p <.001; n=138. χ² (1) = 1.02, p =.31; RMSEA = .01 (90% CI =.00-.23); CFI=1.00 14

  15. Path Analysis, Cont’d. Joint Patient-physician .51* Response Efficacy −.40* Power Distance .53* Physician Note. Non-significant paths are not shown. *p <.001; n=138. 15

  16. Discussion • Patient-physician relationship is challenged by a significant power distance between physicians and patients. • Participatory decision-making depends on how patients perceive their participatory roles in the context of patient-physician communication (e.g., Is it beneficial for patients?). • The level of response efficacy mediates the level of power distance and the level of shared decision-making. • The level of power distance directly influences patients’ preference for unilateral physicians’ decision-making.

  17. Implication • Knowing how cultural orientations and patients’ beliefs about involvement influence patients’ preferences for decision making will… • Shed light on how to produce culturally appropriate intervention programs designed to build collaborative medical practices . • Help physicians to establish strong patient-physician relationships from patient-oriented perspectives. • Guide medical policy makers to reconsider how to facilitate participatory decision-making through enabling patients to feel empowered.

  18. Limitations and Future Research • College student samples may limit generalization of the present study. • The process of medical decision-making under serious disease conditions may differ. • Cross-sectional study • Dyadic relationships between patients and physicians may evolve over time. In the future research, the duration of the patient-physician interaction should be considered to assess the dynamics of their relationships.

  19. Comments? Questions? • Thank you so much for listening! • Contact. hyunheeh@hawaii.edu

More Related