The role of patient activation on patient-provider communication and quality of care for US and foreign born Latino patients.

Margarita Alegría, William Sribney, Debra Perez, Mara Laderman, Kristen Keefe
Author Information
  1. Margarita Alegría: Center for Multicultural Mental Health Research, Cambridge Health Alliance and Harvard Medical School, 120 Beacon Street, 4th Floor, Somerville, MA, 02143, USA. malegria@charesearch.org

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Previous research has shown positive effects of patient activation on healthcare outcomes, but there is practically no information on the generalization of these findings for Latino patients. Little data are available on whether patient activation is associated with healthcare outcomes for Latino patients and whether activation varies by language proficiency and nativity status.
OBJECTIVE: We examined the levels of activation by characteristics of Latino patients (e.g. nativity, language, health status). We investigated whether patient activation relates to the quality of care received and enhanced doctor-patient communication for Latino patients.
DESIGN: We conducted analyses of 1,067 US born and foreign born Latinos who participated in the second wave of the PEW/RWJF Hispanic Healthcare Survey during 2008.
PARTICIPANTS: Participants were self-identified Latinos (18+) with a doctor visit, living in the contiguous United States who could be contacted by telephone.
RESULTS: US born Latinos had significantly (P < 0.001) greater patient activation scores than foreign born Latinos (75 versus 70). Latinos classified as bilingual and those reporting excellent health evidenced higher mean activation scores as compared to Spanish-speaking Latinos and those reporting fair or poor health. After adjusting for demographics, health status, other language and service use factors, patient activation was strongly associated with self-reported quality of care and better doctor-patient communication among both US and foreign born Latino respondents.
CONCLUSIONS: Interventions that augment patient activation could increase quality of care and improved patient-provider communication, potentially reducing health care disparities for Latinos.

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Grants

  1. P50 MH073469/NIMH NIH HHS
  2. P60 MD002261/NIMHD NIH HHS
  3. P60 MD0 02261/NIMHD NIH HHS
  4. 1P50 MHO 73469/PHS HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Communication Barriers
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Emigrants and Immigrants
Female
Healthcare Disparities
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Physician-Patient Relations
Quality of Health Care
United States
Young Adult

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0activationpatientLatinosLatinobornpatientshealthcarequalitycommunicationUSforeignwhetherlanguagestatushealthcareoutcomesassociatednativitydoctor-patientscoresreportingpatient-providerBACKGROUND:PreviousresearchshownpositiveeffectspracticallyinformationgeneralizationfindingsLittledataavailablevariesproficiencyOBJECTIVE:examinedlevelscharacteristicseginvestigatedrelatesreceivedenhancedDESIGN:conductedanalyses1067participatedsecondwavePEW/RWJFHispanicHealthcareSurvey2008PARTICIPANTS:Participantsself-identified18+doctorvisitlivingcontiguousUnitedStatescontactedtelephoneRESULTS:significantlyP<0001greater75versus70classifiedbilingualexcellentevidencedhighermeancomparedSpanish-speakingfairpooradjustingdemographicsserviceusefactorsstronglyself-reportedbetteramongrespondentsCONCLUSIONS:Interventionsaugmentincreaseimprovedpotentiallyreducingdisparitiesrole

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