Health Equity (Jun 2020)

What Matters When It Comes to Trust in One's Physician: Race/Ethnicity, Sociodemographic Factors, and/or Access to and Experiences with Health Care?

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1089/heq.2019.0101

Abstract

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Purpose: Interpersonal trust is linked to therapeutic factors of patient care, including adherence to treatment, continuity with a provider, perceived effectiveness of care, and clinical outcomes. Differences in interpersonal trust across groups may contribute to health disparities. We explored whether differences in interpersonal trust varied across three racial/ethnic groups. Additionally, we explored how different health care factors were associated with differences in trust. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional, computer-administered survey with 600 racially and ethnically diverse adults in Chicago, IL, from a wide variety of neighborhoods. We used staged ordinal logistic regression models to analyze the association between interpersonal trust and variables of interest. Results: Interpersonal trust did not differ by racial or ethnic group. However, individuals with 0?2 annual doctor visits, those reporting having a ?hard time? getting health care services, those answering ?yes? to ?Did you not follow advice or treatment plan because it cost too much?,? and those reporting waiting more than 6 days/never getting an appointment had significantly increased odds of low trust. We did not find differences across racial/ethnic groups. Conclusion: Our study suggests that access to health care and interactions within the health care setting negatively impact individual's trust in their physician.