Patient-Centeredness and its Correlates among First Year Medical Students

Objective: This research was performed to study the attitudes that medical students hold concerning their relationships with patients, and whether such attitudes are gender-related, affect career plans, and influence their evaluation of psycho-social and biomedical issues. Methods: One hundred fifty...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of psychiatry in medicine 1999-01, Vol.29 (3), p.347-356
Hauptverfasser: Krupat, Edward, Hiam, C. Michael, Fleming, Michael Z., Freeman, Phillip
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container_end_page 356
container_issue 3
container_start_page 347
container_title International journal of psychiatry in medicine
container_volume 29
creator Krupat, Edward
Hiam, C. Michael
Fleming, Michael Z.
Freeman, Phillip
description Objective: This research was performed to study the attitudes that medical students hold concerning their relationships with patients, and whether such attitudes are gender-related, affect career plans, and influence their evaluation of psycho-social and biomedical issues. Methods: One hundred fifty-three first year students at the Boston University School of Medicine completed the Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale (PPOS), a scale that differentiates between a patient-centered vs. doctor-centered orientation toward medical practice, indicated their interest in community and primary care practice, and rank ordered psycho-social and biomedical clinical issues in terms of their perceived relative importance. Results: The data revealed that female medical students were more patient-centered, and that (across sexes) patient centeredness was positively associated with an interest in community and primary care practice and the ranking of psycho-social issues. Conclusions: These findings indicate that differences in the practice attitudes of males and females exist very early on in medical training, and that these differences are associated with anticipated career choices. They also suggest that the PPOS may prove useful in measuring the attitudes of practicing physicians toward their clinical roles and might predict physicians' behavioral strategies and patient medical outcomes.
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Results: The data revealed that female medical students were more patient-centered, and that (across sexes) patient centeredness was positively associated with an interest in community and primary care practice and the ranking of psycho-social issues. Conclusions: These findings indicate that differences in the practice attitudes of males and females exist very early on in medical training, and that these differences are associated with anticipated career choices. 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subjects Adult
Analysis of Variance
Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitudes
Boston
Career Choice
Female
Humans
Male
Medical students
Patient-Centered Care
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Primary care
Primary Health Care
Psychological Tests - standards
Sampling Studies
Sex Factors
Students
Students, Medical - psychology
title Patient-Centeredness and its Correlates among First Year Medical Students
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