Medical Mistrust Among Black Patients with Serious Illness: A Mixed Methods Study.

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Journal of General Internal Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-26 DOI:10.1007/s11606-024-08997-z
Kristine L Cueva, Arisa R Marshall, Cyndy R Snyder, Bessie A Young, Crystal E Brown
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Abstract

Background: Medical mistrust among Black patients has been used to explain the existence of well-documented racial inequities at the end of life that negatively impact this group. However, there are few studies that describe patient perspectives around the impact of racism and discriminatory experiences on mistrust within the context of serious illness.

Objective: To better characterize experiences of racism and discrimination among patients with serious illness and its association with medical mistrust.

Participants: Seventy-two Black participants with serious illness hospitalized at an academic county hospital.

Approach: This is a convergent mixed methods study using data from participant-completed surveys and existing semi-structured interviews eliciting participants' perspectives around their experiences with medical racism, communication, and decision-making.

Main measures: The experience of medical racism and its association with Group-Based Medical Mistrust (GBMM) scale scores, a validated measure of medical mistrust.

Key results: Of the 72 Black participants, 35% participated in interviews. Participants were mostly men who had significant socioeconomic disadvantage, including low levels of wealth, income, and educational attainment. There were reported high levels of race-based mistrust in the overall GBMM scale score (mean [SD], 36.6 [9.9]), as well as high scores within the suspicion (14.2 [5.0]), group disparities in healthcare (9.9 [2.8]), and lack of support (9.1 [2.7]) subscales. Three qualitative themes aligned with the GBMM subscales. Participants expressed skepticism of healthcare workers (HCWs) and modern medicine, recounted personal experiences of discrimination in the medical setting, and were frustrated with poor communication from HCWs.

Conclusions: This study found high levels of mistrust among Black patients with serious illness. Suspicion of HCWs, disparities in healthcare by race, and a lack of support from HCWs were overarching themes that influenced medical mistrust. Critical, race-conscious approaches are needed to create strategies and frameworks to improve the trustworthiness of healthcare institutions and workers.

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黑人重病患者对医疗的不信任:混合方法研究。
背景:黑人患者对医疗的不信任被用来解释在生命末期存在的有据可查的种族不平等现象,这些现象对这一群体产生了负面影响。然而,很少有研究从患者的角度描述种族主义和歧视经历对重症患者不信任的影响:目的:更好地描述重病患者的种族主义和歧视经历及其与医疗不信任之间的关联:72名在一家学术性县级医院住院的重症黑人参与者:这是一项趋同的混合方法研究,使用的数据来自参与者填写的调查问卷和现有的半结构式访谈,以了解参与者对医疗种族主义、沟通和决策经验的看法:主要测量指标:医疗种族主义的经历及其与基于群体的医疗不信任(GBMM)量表得分的关联,GBMM量表是一种经过验证的医疗不信任测量指标:在 72 名黑人参与者中,35% 参加了访谈。参与者大多为男性,他们在社会经济方面处于劣势,包括财富、收入和教育程度较低。据报告,在 GBMM 总分(平均值[标度],36.6 [9.9])中,基于种族的不信任程度很高,而在怀疑(14.2 [5.0])、医疗保健中的群体差异(9.9 [2.8])和缺乏支持(9.1 [2.7])分量表中,基于种族的不信任程度也很高。三个定性主题与 GBMM 分量表一致。参与者对医护人员和现代医学表示怀疑,讲述了在医疗环境中遭受歧视的亲身经历,并对医护人员沟通不畅感到沮丧:本研究发现,患有严重疾病的黑人患者对医护人员高度不信任。对医护人员的怀疑、不同种族在医疗保健方面的差异以及缺乏医护人员的支持是影响医疗不信任的主要原因。需要采取批判性的、具有种族意识的方法来制定战略和框架,以提高医疗机构和工作人员的可信度。
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来源期刊
Journal of General Internal Medicine
Journal of General Internal Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
5.30%
发文量
749
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of General Internal Medicine is the official journal of the Society of General Internal Medicine. It promotes improved patient care, research, and education in primary care, general internal medicine, and hospital medicine. Its articles focus on topics such as clinical medicine, epidemiology, prevention, health care delivery, curriculum development, and numerous other non-traditional themes, in addition to classic clinical research on problems in internal medicine.
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