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Patient Age Influences Perceptions About Health Care Communication

Overview
Journal Fam Med
Specialty Public Health
Date 2009 Feb 3
PMID 19184691
Citations 26
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Abstract

Objective: The study's objective was to determine if a patient's age is independently associated with how he/she perceives interactions with health care providers.

Methods: We used a secondary, cross-sectional analysis of nationally representative data from the 2002 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). We measured the independent association between patient age and six outcomes pertaining to communication and decision-making autonomy, while simultaneously controlling for gender, race, ethnicity, family income, educational attainment, census region, rural residence, insurance status, and usual source of care.

Results: Compared to patients>or=65 years, patients ages 18-64 were less likely to report that their provider "always" listened to them, "always" showed respect for what they had to say, and "always" spent enough time with them.

Discussion: Patient perceptions of health care interactions vary by age. A better understanding of how and why age is associated with patient-provider communication could be useful to design practice-level interventions that enhance services and also to develop national policies that improve health care delivery and health outcomes.

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