PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

The influence of culture on care receivers' satisfaction and aggressive tendencies in the emergency department.

  • Alon Lisak,
  • Dorit Efrat-Treister,
  • Ella Glikson,
  • Vladimir Zeldetz,
  • Dan Schwarzfuchs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256513
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 9
p. e0256513

Abstract

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IntroductionReducing aggressive tendencies among care receivers in the emergency department has great economic and psychological benefits for care receivers, staff, and health care organizations. In a study conducted in a large multicultural hospital emergency department, we examined how cultural factors relating to ethnicity interact to enhance care receivers' satisfaction and reduce their aggressive tendencies. Specifically, we explored how care receivers' cultural affiliation, individual cultural characteristics, and the cultural situational setting interact to increase care receivers' satisfaction and reduce their aggressive tendencies.MethodData were collected using survey responses from 214 care receivers. We use structural equation models and the bootstrap method to analyze the data.ResultsCare receivers' openness to diversity (an individual cultural characteristic) was positively related to their satisfaction that was associated with lower aggressive tendencies, only when they were affiliated with a cultural minority group and when the cultural situational setting included language accessibility.ConclusionOur results demonstrate that cultural affiliation, individual cultural characteristics, and cultural situational setting can affect care receivers' satisfaction and aggressive tendencies in a multicultural emergency department context. In particular, high cultural openness of care receivers, and making information accessible in their native language, increased satisfaction and reduced aggressive tendencies among cultural minority care receivers in our study.