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Clinical Trials/NCT04315402
NCT04315402
Unknown
Not Applicable

The Impact of Provider Demographics on Patients' Continuity of Care

TriHealth Inc.1 site in 1 country415 target enrollmentAugust 12, 2020

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Race Concordant Patient-provider Relationship
Sponsor
TriHealth Inc.
Enrollment
415
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Patient's rate of follow-up
Last Updated
5 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The race concordance of providers to their patients impacts a patient's investment and agency in the patient-provider relationship. The mistrust of medicine within the African American population remains and patients feel unengaged in their care. Race concordant provider-patient rela-tionships would improve the equity of patient care in our clinic.

Detailed Description

The patients of the obstetrics and gynecology resident clinic at Good Samaritan Hospital have a poor follow-up rate for their gynecologic and prenatal care visits. In addition, patients oftentimes voice frustration over the care that they receive and sometimes remark that they feel their provider was "racist." These patients often have complex social situations that cannot be solved in one office visit but perhaps the providers' ability to gain the trust of the minority patients is inadequate. The residents in the OB/GYN program are 80% white with no African American representation. If patients are unable to connect with caregivers due to cross-cultural differences, this could be remedied by training current residents in cross-cultural communication or re-cruitment of a resident class more representative of the majority African American patient population. This project will provide perspective on the minority patients' needs in the provider-patient relationship and allow providers to reexamine their ability to gain trust with the ultimate goal to increase follow-up rates. Follow-up rates for prenatal care are directly linked to improved maternal and fetal outcomes. The investigators goals are threefold: to gain clarity on whether or not a more diverse resident group would be helpful in gaining the trust of patients, to assess the current state of the well-established historical and generational mistrust of medical care by the African American patients of the clinic, and to explore how patient perception of their provider impacts their rate of follow up in the large community hospital clinic.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
August 12, 2020
End Date
March 2021
Last Updated
5 years ago
Study Type
Observational
Sex
Female

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

  • Not provided

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Patient's rate of follow-up

Time Frame: 6 months

Whether or not patient was present at their next scheduled GYN or OB follow-up appointment.

Study Sites (1)

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