Attitudes to doctors and medicine: The effect of setting and doctor-patient relationship

Objective. There have been few studies of attitudes to doctors and medicine, despite their potential importancein health psychology. The present study examines the effect on attitudes of setting (general practice vs. antenatal) and context (specific doctors vs. doctors in general). Method. Interview...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of health psychology 2002-02, Vol.7 (1), p.117-125
Hauptverfasser: Conroy, Ronán M., Teehan, Maeve, Siriwardena, Ruwani, Smyth, Olive, McGee, Hannah M., Fernandes, Paula
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective. There have been few studies of attitudes to doctors and medicine, despite their potential importancein health psychology. The present study examines the effect on attitudes of setting (general practice vs. antenatal) and context (specific doctors vs. doctors in general). Method. Interview survey of 167 antenatal attenders and 113women general practice attenders, using an extended form of the Attitudes to Doctors and Medicine Scale of Marteau (1990). Results. Although antenatal attenders expressed more positive attitudes to doctors and medicine than general practice attenders, differences were small, and only statistically significant for 4 of 19 scale items. Compared with ratings of doctors in general, however, patients gave much more positive ratings to both their family doctor and the antenatal clinic doctors, the latter being rated higher than the former. Antenatal doctors were most likely to be rated as good doctors, to have the patient's absolute confidence, and to know what was best for them (all p
ISSN:1359-107X
2044-8287
DOI:10.1348/135910702169312