| Literature DB >> 24185154 |
Whitney Wall, Carolyn M Tucker, Julia Roncoroni, Blake A Allan, Phillip Nguyen.
Abstract
Research suggests that patients' interactions with their front desk office staff and patient-centered culturally sensitive health care are important factors in diverse patients' overall health care satisfaction. Yet, patient-centered culturally sensitive health care research has focused almost exclusively on provider care. This study tested the hypothesis that patient-perceived cultural sensitivity of front desk office staff has a significant positive association with patient treatment adherence and that this relationship is mediated by patient health care satisfaction. Study participants were a culturally diverse sample of 1,191 patients from health care sites across the U.S. Results of a meditational analysis supported the tested hypothesis. Patient health care satisfaction fully mediated the relationship between patient-perceived cultural sensitivity of front desk office staff and patient treatment adherence. The patient satisfaction and cultural sensitivity variables explained 10% of the variance in patient treatment adherence. Training front desk office staff in patient-centered culturally sensitive health care may improve patients' health care satisfaction and treatment adherence.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24185154 DOI: 10.1353/hpu.2013.0170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Care Poor Underserved ISSN: 1049-2089