| Literature DB >> 25600254 |
Christopher Michael Petrilli1, Megan Mack2, Jennifer Janowitz Petrilli1, Andy Hickner3, Sanjay Saint2, Vineet Chopra2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Despite a growing body of literature, uncertainty regarding the influence of physician dress on patients' perceptions exists. Therefore, we performed a systematic review to examine the influence of physician attire on patient perceptions including trust, satisfaction and confidence. SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, INTERVENTIONS AND OUTCOMES: We searched MEDLINE, Embase, Biosis Previews and Conference Papers Index. Studies that: (1) involved participants ≥18 years of age; (2) evaluated physician attire; and (3) reported patient perceptions related to attire were included. Two authors determined study eligibility. Studies were categorised by country of origin, clinical discipline (eg, internal medicine, surgery), context (inpatient vs outpatient) and occurrence of a clinical encounter when soliciting opinions regarding attire. Studies were assessed using the Downs and Black Scale risk of bias scale. Owing to clinical and methodological heterogeneity, meta-analyses were not attempted.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25600254 PMCID: PMC4312788 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Characteristics of included studies
| Authors, year, location | Study design | Clinical setting (context) | Patient characteristics | Attire compared | Clinical encounter (Y/N) | Perceptions/preferences measured | Influence/preference expressed for attire | Pertinent results and comments | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Mean age (years) | Education level | % Male | Types of attire | White coat specified | |||||||
| Al-Ghobain | Picture-based survey and face-to-face interview of patients awaiting care | General medicine clinic (outpatient) | 399 | 37.2 | 66% were at least high-school educated | 57.9 | Males: formal attire, scrubs, national attire | Yes | No | Confidence | Yes; formal attire | ▸ Male and female patients preferred formal attire |
| Au | Cross-sectional, picture-based survey; family members reviewed pictures and rated factors such as age, sex, grooming, tattoos, etc | Three intensive care units (acute care) | 337 | N/R | 60% College or university educated | 32 | Formal attire+white coat, suit, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Caring competence | Yes; formal attire and white coat | ▸ Formal attire+white coat was rated as being most important when first meeting a physician |
| Baevsky | Prospective encounter-based, non-randomised exit-survey of patients conducted after receiving care. Physicians alternated attire on daily basis | Urban urgent care clinic (acute care) | 596 | N/R | N/R | N/R | Formal attire+white coat, scrubs+white coat | Yes | Yes | Degree of concern knowledge | No preference | ▸ No differences seen between attires with regard to patient satisfaction |
| Boon | Prospective questionnaire following clinical interaction | Accident and emergency department (acute care) | 329 | N/R | N/R | N/R | White coat, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | Yes | Professionalism | No preference | ▸ Style of dress did not affect patient perceptions of medical staff |
| Budny | Description-based survey of patients awaiting care | Podiatric clinics in private practice and hospital-based settings (procedural) | 155 | 18–25: 7% | N/R | 36 | Formal attire, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Confidence | Yes; formal attire | ▸ 68% of all patients reported more confidence if physicians donned formal attire |
| Cha | Picture-based survey regarding patient preferences for attire | Obstetrics and gynaecology clinic at an academic medical centre (procedural) | 184 | Approximately 66% ≤25 years of age | Approximately 66% at least high-school educated | 0 | Formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat; scrubs+white coat; casual attire+white coat, casual attire−white coat, scrubs−white coat | Yes | No | Comfort | Yes; scrubs+white coat | ▸ 63% of patients stated that physician clothing did not influence their comfort with the physician |
| Chang | Picture-based survey regarding preferences for attire prior to clinical consultation | Alternative medicine clinic at an academic medical centre (outpatient) | 153 | 43.3 | N/R | 32 | White coat, formal attire, traditional attire | Yes | No | Comfort | Yes; white coat | ▸ Patients most preferred white coats regardless of whether Western or oriental physician portrayed in photographs |
| Chung | Prospective, non-randomised, clinical encounter-based survey of patients conducted after receiving care | Traditional Korean medical clinic (outpatient) | 143 | 37.7 | N/R | 34 | White coat, formal attire, traditional attire, casual attire | Yes | Yes | Comfort | Yes; white coat | ▸ White coat was associated with competence, trustworthiness and patient satisfaction |
| Edwards | Prospective non-randomised, clinical encounter-based questionnaire. Physician attire rotated after 12-weeks | Outpatient surgical clinic at a military teaching hospital (procedural) | 570 | N/R | N/R | N/R | scrubs+white coat, traditional attire | Yes | Yes | Appropriateness | No preference | ▸ Surgeon clothing did not affect patient's opinions |
| Fischer | Prospective non-randomised, clinical encounter-based questionnaire; physicians were randomly assigned to wear one of three attire types each week | Outpatient obstetrics and gynaecology clinics at a university hospital (procedural) | 1116 | 37.3 | N/R | 0 | Formal attire+white coat, casual attire±white coat, scrubs | Yes | Yes | Comfort | No preference | ▸ Patient satisfaction with their physicians was high; attire did not influence satisfaction |
| Friis and Tilles, 1988, California, USA | Picture-based survey; patients who had received care from a resident physician during a prior visit were surveyed regarding their preferences for physician attire | Internal medicine clinic, emergency room, internal medicine ward, community-based internal medicine clinic (mixed) | 200 | N/R (Mode: 20–29) | N/R | 40 | White coat | Yes | Yes | Confidence | No preference | ▸ Most patients voiced no attire preference; however, 64% said neatness of dress was moderately to very important |
| Gallagher | Picture-based survey of patients awaiting care | outpatient endocrinology clinic in a tertiary referral hospital (outpatient) | 124 | 52.3 | N/R | 50 | White coat, formal attire, suit, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Appropriateness of attire | Yes; White coat | ▸ White coat was most often preferred by both male and female patients |
| Gherardi | Picture-based survey in multiple care settings | outpatient clinics, inpatient wards, emergency departments (mixed) | 511 | N/R | N/R | 44 | White coat, formal attire, suit, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Confidence | Yes; White coat | ▸ White coat was the most confidence-inspiring attire in all hospital settings |
| Gooden | Cross-sectional, clinical encounter-based survey of hospitalised patients | Medical and surgical wards of two teaching hospitals (inpatient) | 154 | Median 54 | N/R | 58 | White coat, no white coat | Yes | Yes | Aloof | Yes; White coat | ▸ Higher scores noted when white coat was worn |
| Hartmans | Picture-based, cross-sectional survey administered online through social media as well as in-person in waiting rooms | University hospital-based outpatient clinic and related offsite clinics (outpatient) | 1506 | 38.4 | 70.1% completed at least high school | 32 | Formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat, semi-formal attire, casual attire | Yes | No | Confidence, ease with physician | Yes; Formal attire+white coat | ▸ Patients have the most confidence in a female doctor wearing formal attire+white coat, while they felt most at ease with a female physician in casual attire |
| Ikusaka | Clinical encounter-based questionnaire; physician rotated wearing a white coat weekly | University hospital outpatient clinic (outpatient) | 599 | White coat group: 50 | N/R | 45 | Formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat | Yes | Yes | Ease with physician | No preference | ▸ Although patients stated they preferred white coats, satisfaction was not statistically different between the groups |
| Kersnik | Patient allocation-blinded, clinical encounter-based survey; physicians alternated wearing a white coat daily | Outpatient, urban family practice (outpatient) | 259 | N/R | N/R | N/R | White coat, no white coat | Yes | Yes | Integrity | No preference | ▸ There were no significant difference in patient satisfaction between the two groups |
| Kocks | Picture-based survey of patient preferences | Patients were interviewed at home; professionals were given a written survey at a symposium (mixed) | 116 | 78 | N/R | 56.9 | Formal attire, suit, business-casual attire, casual attire | No | No | Preference | Yes; Formal attire | ▸ Patients preferred formal attire and suit over other attires |
| Kurihara | Picture-based, self-administered questionnaires | outpatients at 5 pharmacies across Japan | 491 | 51.9 | N/R | 40.3 | Formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Appropriateness | Yes; Formal attire+white coat | ▸ Formal attire+white coat was considered the most appropriate style of clothing followed by scrubs |
| Li and Haber, 2005, New York, USA | Patient-allocation blinded, picture-based, quasi-experimental before-and-after study; physicians alternated attire weekly | Urban emergency department in a university medical centre (acute care) | 111 | 42 | N/R | 53 | Formal attire+white coat, scrubs | Yes | Yes | Professionalism | No preference | ▸ Physician attire was not associated with satisfaction or professionalism in the emergency department during the study |
| Lill and Wilkinson, 2005, Christchurch, New Zealand | Picture-based survey of patient preferences | Inpatients and outpatients from a wide range of wards, medical and surgical clinics (mixed) | 451 | 55.9 | N/R | 47 | White coat, formal attire, semiformal | Yes | Yes for inpatients (survey administered before clinical encounter in outpatients) | Preference for physician based on attire displayed in pictures | Yes; Semiformal attire with smile | ▸ Semi-formal attire with a smile was preferred by patients |
| Maruani | Picture-based, prospective cross- sectional study | Outpatient dermatology patients of a tertiary care hospital, 2 dermatological private consulting rooms (procedural) | 329 | 52.3 | N/R | 43.8 | White coat, formal attire, business-casual attire, casual attire | Yes | No | Confidence | Yes; White coat | ▸ White coats were preferred by hospital and private practice outpatients significantly more than other attires, for both male and female physicians |
| McKinstry and Wang, 1991, West Lothian and Edinburgh, Scotland | Picture-based, interviewer-led surveys of patients using eight standardised photographs of physicians in different attires | 5 outpatient general medicine clinics (outpatient) | 475 | N/R | N/R | 30.9 | Males: formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat, business-casual attire | Yes | No | Acceptability | Yes; Formal attire+white coat | ▸ Male physicians: formal attire−white coat was preferred followed by formal attire+white coat |
| McLean | Clinical encounter-based questionnaire with one of two providers dressed in military uniform or civilian formal attire | Fracture clinic in a ‘District Hospital’ (procedural) | 77 | 39 | N/R | 62 | Military uniform, formal attire | No | Yes | Approachable Confidence | Yes; Formal attire | ▸ Civilian formal attire was felt more professional by patients |
| McNaughton-Filion | Picture and description based-survey administered by a research-assistant or resident to both patients and physicians | Urban, university hospital family practice and community-based family practice clinic (Outpatient) | 80 | N/R | 54% College or university educated | 41 | Formal attire+white coat, formal attire−white coat, casual attire+white coat, casual attire−white coat, scrubs+white coat | Yes | No | Professionalism | Yes; Formal attire+white coat | ▸ Majority of patients surveyed believed formal attire+white coats in male physicians would be more likely to inspire trust & confidence. |
| Niederhauser | Picture and description-based survey of patient preferences | Hospital-based obstetrics and gynaecology clinics (procedural) | 328 | 26.4 | N/R | 0 | Military uniform+white coat military uniform−white coat, scrubs+white coat, scrubs−white coat | Yes | No | Comfort | Yes; Scrubs±white coat | ▸ 61% of patients preferred Scrubs |
| Pronchik | Clinical encounter-based, prospective survey; All male students, residents and attendings assigned to wear or not wear a necktie according to a specified schedule; female providers were excluded | Emergency department of a community teaching hospital | 316 | N/R | N/R | N/R | Necktie, no necktie | No | Yes | Satisfaction | No preference | ▸ Neckties did not influence patients’ impression of medical care, time spent, or overall provider competence |
| Rehman | Picture-based, randomised, cross-sectional descriptive survey | Outpatient medicine clinic at a Veterans-Affairs Medical Center (outpatient) | 400 | 52.4 | 42.8% at least high school educated | 54 | Formal attire+white coat; formal attire−white coat, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Authoritative Compassionate | Yes; Formal attire+white coat | ▸ Significant preference for formal attire+white coat |
| Sotgiu | Picture and description-based questionnaire | Medical and surgical outpatient clinics (mixed) | 765 | 43.2 | 45.8% finished high school or college-level | 7.5 | Formal attire+white coat, casual attire+white coat, scrubs+white coat | Yes | No | ‘Willingness to share heath issues’ with each of the physicians, but data not reported | Yes; Scrubs+white coat | ▸ The greatest proportion of patients preferred scrubs+white Coat (47% for male physicians, 43.7% for female physicians respectively) followed by formal attire+white coat (30.7% for male physicians, 26.8% for female physicians) |
| Yonekura | Picture-based survey of patient preferences | Inpatients and outpatients at a university hospital | 259 | 47.8 | N/R | 42.9 | White coat, formal attire+white coat, traditional attire, casual attire, scrubs | Yes | No | Cleanliness Competence | Yes; White coat | ▸ The combined white coat options in the survey were the most preferred by patients across all measured perceptions |
Figure 2Stacked bar chart showing variation in patient preference for physician attire across geographic regions.
Figure 3Stacked bar chart showing variation in patient preference for physician attire with clinical encounters.
Figure 4Stacked bar chart showing variation in patient preference for physician attire across contextual aspects of care.
Risk of bias within included studies
| Author, year, location | Clinical interaction? | Group | Does the study provide estimates of the random variability in the data for the main outcomes? | Have the characteristics of the patients included and excluded been described? | Were study subjects in different intervention groups recruited over the same period of time? | Were incomplete questionnaires excluded? | Reviewer scores | Risk of bias adjudication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fischer | Yes | Surgery/procedural | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 14 of 27 | Low |
| Hartmans | No | Outpatient | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 14 of 27 | Low |
| Gooden | No | Mixed | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 13 of 27 | Low |
| Baevsky | Yes | Acute care | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 12 of 27 | Low |
| Gherardi | No | Mixed | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 12 of 27 | Low |
| Lill and Wilkinson, 2005, Christchurch, New Zealand | No | Mixed | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 12 of 27 | Low |
| Niederhauser | No | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 12 of 27 | Low |
| Rehman | No | Medicine | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 12 of 27 | Low |
| Pronchik | Yes | Acute care | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 11.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Au | No | Acute care | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 11.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Li and Haber 2005, New York, USA | Yes | Acute care | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 11.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Al-Ghobain | No | Medicine | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Boon | Yes | Acute care | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Chung | Yes | Medicine | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Edwards | Yes | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Kersnik | Yes | Medicine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Yonekura | No | Mixed | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 11 of 27 | Moderate |
| Maruani | No | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Cha | No | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 10.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Chang | No | Medicine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 10.5 of 27 | Moderate |
| Budny | No | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10 of 27 | Moderate |
| Ikusaka | Yes | Medicine | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 10 of 27 | Moderate |
| McLean | Yes | Surgery/procedural | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | 10 of 27 | Moderate |
| Kurihara | No | Outpatient | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 10 of 27 | Moderate |
| Friis and Tilles, 1988, California, USA | Yes | Mixed | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 9.5 of 27 | High |
| Sotgiu | No | Mixed | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 9.5 of 27 | High |
| Gallagher | No | Medicine | 0 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 9 of 27 | High |
| Kocks | No | Medicine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 8 of 27 | High |
| McNaughton-Filion | No | Medicine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7.5 of 27 | High |
| McKinstry and Wang, 1991, West Lothian and Edinburgh, Scotland | No | Medicine | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 of 27 | High |
A priori, studies that received a score of 12 or greater were considered to be at low risk of bias; scores of 10–12 moderate risk of bias; and scores less than 10 at high risk of bias.
Scores for key questions that differentiated studies at high versus moderate and low risk of bias are shown.
Scores shown represent independently rated and agreed-on ratings by two reviewers.