Association of Racial/Ethnic and Gender Concordance Between Patients and Physicians With Patient Experience Ratings
Abstract
The Press Ganey Outpatient Medical Practice Survey is used to measure the patient experience. An understanding of the patient- and physician-related determinants of the patient experience may help identify opportunities to improve health care delivery and physician ratings.
To evaluate the associations between the patient experience as measured by scores on the Press Ganey survey and patient-physician racial/ethnic and gender concordance. Design, Setting, and Participants: A cross-sectional analysis of Press Ganey surveys returned for outpatient visits within the University of Pennsylvania Health System between 2014 and 2017 was performed. Participants included adult patient and physician dyads for whom surveys were returned. Data analysis was performed from January to June 2019. Exposures: Patient-physician racial/ethnic and gender concordance. Main Outcomes and Measures: The primary outcome was receipt of the maximum score for the "likelihood of your recommending this care provider to others" question in the Care Provider domain of the Press Ganey survey. Secondary outcomes included each of the remaining 9 questions in the Care Provider domain. Generalized estimating equations clustering on physicians with exchangeable intracluster correlations and cluster-robust standard errors were used to investigate associations between the outcomes and patient-physician racial/ethnic and gender concordance.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 85.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Concordance
- Ethnic group
- Medicine
- Family medicine
- Patient satisfaction
- Health care
- Cross-sectional study
- Demography
- Gender equality