BACKGROUND: The lack of racial and ethnic concordance between patients and their physicians may contribute to American health disparities. OBJECTIVE: To examine the level of racial and ethnic concordance for patients and primary care clinicians and its association with measures of patient experience. DESIGN: Multivariate cross-sectional analysis of nationally representative data. PARTICIPANTS: Adults 18 to 64 in the 2019 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey who had at least one medical visit in the past year. MAIN MEASURES: Key independent variables include having a racially/ethnically concordant primary care clinician, lacking a usual source of care, and having a usual source that is a place rather than a person. Outcomes include overall satis...
age-, gender-, and racial/ethnic-concordant primary care physicians. Design: Focus group interviews....
Purpose: The clinical utility of race and ethnicity has been debated. It is important to understand ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine how Asian-American patients\u27 ratings of primary care performance differ fro...
We examined a national sample of African American, white, Hispanic, and Asian American respondents t...
OBJECTIVE: To determine if patient assessments (reports and ratings) of primary care differ by patie...
Over the last decade, patient's health care experience has become a valuable metric. Studies suggest...
Ethnic minorities are poorly represented among physicians and other health professionals. In what is...
Racial and ethnic minorities, and in particular African Americans, have had a long-standing battle o...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine race, gender and language concordance in terms of i...
This study adds a gender approach to determine how patient provider racial concordance and accultura...
BackgroundPatient and provider race and gender concordance (patient and physician identify as the sa...
Patients of color are less likely than White patients to report being the same race as their healthc...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine race, gender and language concordance in terms of ...
Background/Aims: Patient-provider race/ethnicity or language (REL) concordance can influence quality...
Purpose: Research suggests that providers contribute to racial disparities in health outcomes. Ident...
age-, gender-, and racial/ethnic-concordant primary care physicians. Design: Focus group interviews....
Purpose: The clinical utility of race and ethnicity has been debated. It is important to understand ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine how Asian-American patients\u27 ratings of primary care performance differ fro...
We examined a national sample of African American, white, Hispanic, and Asian American respondents t...
OBJECTIVE: To determine if patient assessments (reports and ratings) of primary care differ by patie...
Over the last decade, patient's health care experience has become a valuable metric. Studies suggest...
Ethnic minorities are poorly represented among physicians and other health professionals. In what is...
Racial and ethnic minorities, and in particular African Americans, have had a long-standing battle o...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine race, gender and language concordance in terms of i...
This study adds a gender approach to determine how patient provider racial concordance and accultura...
BackgroundPatient and provider race and gender concordance (patient and physician identify as the sa...
Patients of color are less likely than White patients to report being the same race as their healthc...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine race, gender and language concordance in terms of ...
Background/Aims: Patient-provider race/ethnicity or language (REL) concordance can influence quality...
Purpose: Research suggests that providers contribute to racial disparities in health outcomes. Ident...
age-, gender-, and racial/ethnic-concordant primary care physicians. Design: Focus group interviews....
Purpose: The clinical utility of race and ethnicity has been debated. It is important to understand ...
OBJECTIVE: To examine how Asian-American patients\u27 ratings of primary care performance differ fro...