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Communications with physicians about High
Blood Pressure is poorer for Black patients
than White patients
Newswise — Black patients with high blood
pressure experience poorer communication
with their doctors than white patients do, a
study led by a University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill researcher has found.
“This is an important finding because poorer
communication is associated with worse
patient satisfaction, adherence to therapy
and blood pressure control, which in turn
may lead to worse disease outcomes for black
patients compared to white patients,” said
Crystal Wiley Cené, M.D., M.P.H., an
assistant professor in the UNC School of
Medicine and lead author of the study.
The study is published in the September 2009
issue of the Journal of General Internal
Medicine.
Cené, a native of Sneads Ferry, N.C. and a
graduate of the Brody School of Medicine at
East Carolina University, led the study
while completing a fellowship in general
internal medicine at Johns Hopkins
University School of Medicine in Baltimore,
Md.
In her study, Cené and colleagues analyzed
audio recordings of patient visits with
their primary care physician as part of a
study of interventions aimed at improving
patient adherence to high blood pressure
therapy.
The larger study was led by Cené’s
mentor, Lisa A. Cooper, M.D., M.P.H., a
Hopkins professor who earned her M.D. at UNC
in 1988. Cooper is also the corresponding
author of Cené’s article.
Previous studies have shown both that
patients in poorer health report having
worse interpersonal communication with their
doctors, and that black patients report
poorer patient-doctor communication than
white patients.
Cené’s study was designed to
examine whether having uncontrolled blood
pressure, in addition to being black, had a
greater negative impact on patient-doctor
communication than just race alone.
Participants in Cené’s study included 226
high blood pressure patients and 39
physicians from 15 primary care practices in
Baltimore. Coders listened to recordings of
the patient visits and measured several
outcomes.
These included, but were not
limited to, the length of visits and the
number of statements devoted to the
communication functions of biomedical
exchange, psychosocial exchange and rapport
building.
The results showed that the black patients
had shorter office visits, less biomedical
and psychosocial exchange and less rapport
building with their doctors than white
patients.
These differences were
statistically significant for psychosocial
exchange and rapport building but not for
biomedical exchange.
Blacks with
uncontrolled high blood pressure fared
somewhat worse than blacks whose blood
pressure was controlled by medication,
whereas there were no significant
differences among whites based on blood
pressure control status.
The researchers found that for each outcome
blacks, regardless of whether their blood
pressure was controlled or not, had worse
communication with their doctors than
whites, regardless of the white patients’
blood pressure control.
The only exception
was for an outcome called “patient positive
affect,” which is a sum of ratings of
patients’ interest, friendliness,
engagement, sympathy and assertiveness
behaviors. For this outcome they found that
blacks with uncontrolled blood pressure had
less positive affect than any of the other
groups.
“It seems that in general blacks talk less
overall to their physicians than white
patients,” Cené said.
“As a result,
communication about specific topics occurs
less often. There are several possible
reasons why they may talk less to their
physicians -- they might not trust the
physician or feel that they are
‘disconnected’ from their doctors, for
whatever reasons.
"This lack of communication
by black patients may in turn make their
physicians talk less to them.” Cené said.
“We believe there also may be an ‘unspoken
subtext’ that occurs in visits between
patients and doctors that influences the
communication that occurs during the visit,”
Cené said.
“It’s possible that black
patients are more likely to pick up on that
‘unspoken subtext’ and it alters their
communication with their doctor. This might
explain why we found that black patients had
less positive affect towards their doctors
than white patients.
"Essentially they are
more sensitized to ‘cue’ into things that
the coders could not easily capture just by
listening to the audiotapes.”span>
The study concluded that patient race was
more important than blood pressure control
status in determining the quality of
patient-doctor communication and recommended
the testing of interventions designed to
improve patient-doctor communication as a
way to reduce racial disparities in the care
of patients with high blood pressure.
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