Concordance of Resident and Patient Perceptions of Culturally Dexterous Patient Care Skills

•Only half of patients feel that they receive culturally dexterous care from surgical residents.•Fifty-seven percent of surgical residents feel confident in their cultural dexterity skills.•Non-White residents are more confident in their cultural dexterity skills.•Patients and residents would benefi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of surgical education 2020-11, Vol.77 (6), p.e138-e145
Hauptverfasser: Atkinson, Rachel B., Ortega, Gezzer, Green, Alexander R., Chun, Maria B.J., Harrington, David T., Lipsett, Pamela A., Mullen, John T., Petrusa, Emil, Reidy, Emma, Haider, Adil H., Smink, Douglas S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Only half of patients feel that they receive culturally dexterous care from surgical residents.•Fifty-seven percent of surgical residents feel confident in their cultural dexterity skills.•Non-White residents are more confident in their cultural dexterity skills.•Patients and residents would benefit from resident training on cultural dexterity. Disparities in surgical care persist. To mitigate these disparities, we are implementing and testing the Provider Awareness and Cultural dexterity Toolkit for Surgeons (PACTS), a curriculum to improve surgical residents’ cultural dexterity during clinical encounters. We analyzed baseline data to look for concordance between residents’ self-perceived cultural dexterity skills and patients’ perceptions of their skills. We hypothesized that residents would rate their skills in cultural dexterity higher than patients would perceive those skills. Prior to the implementation of the curriculum, surgical residents at 5 academic medical centers completed a self-assessment of their skills in culturally dexterous patient care using a modified version of the Cross-Cultural Care Survey. Randomly selected surgical inpatients at these centers completed a similar survey about the quality of culturally dexterous care provided by a surgery resident on their service. Likert scale responses for both assessments were classified as high (agree/strongly agree) or low (neutral/disagree/strongly disagree) competency. Resident and patient ratings of cultural dexterity were compared. Assessments were considered dexterous if 75% of responses were in the high category. Univariate and multivariate analysis was conducted using STATA 16. A total of 179 residents from 5 surgical residency programs completed self-assessments prior to receiving the PACTS curriculum, including 88 (49.2%) women and 97 (54.2%) junior residents (PGY 1-2s), of whom 54.7% were White, 19% were Asian, and 8.9% were Black/African American. A total of 494 patients with an average age of 55.1 years were surveyed, of whom 238 (48.2%) were female and 320 (64.8%) were White. Fifty percent of residents viewed themselves as culturally dexterous, while 57% of patients reported receiving culturally dexterous care; this difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.09). Residents who perceived themselves to be culturally dexterous were more likely to self-identify as non-White as compared to White (p < 0.05). On multivariate analysis, White patients were more likely to report hi
ISSN:1931-7204
1878-7452
DOI:10.1016/j.jsurg.2020.07.007