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Release Date: November 1, 1999
Contact: Edward Krupat, PhD
(617)
732-2901
ekrupat@mcp.edu
Female Medical Students More Patient-Centered
Female medical students are more patient-centered than their male counterparts,
according to a recent study of first-year students at the Boston University School of
Medicine. Students who are more patient-centered plan to enter community and primary care
practice rather than other medical practices, the study indicates.
"Attitudes that generate a patient-centered versus doctor-centered physician style
exist as early as the first year in medical school, and these attitudes can have
potentially important consequences," according to the study's lead investigator,
Edward Krupat, PhD, of the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences.
The research developed and utilized a Patient-Practitioner Orientation Scale (PPOS) to
measure students' attitudes and orientations toward patient-centeredness. The scale
combines dimensions of two different, yet complementary perspectives of
patient-centeredness. The first perspective is concerned with the practitioner's
interest in or willingness to understand patients' lifestyles and to explore
psychosocial issues with patients. A key element of this perspective is the
practitioner's attention to "illness," the problem as understood by the
patient, rather than "disease," the problem as defined biomedically. The second
perspective is concerned with the practitioner's attitudes and behavior in relation
to shared decision making.
In the study, data collected from 153 first-year medical students were used to develop
the PPOS and to test hypotheses about the students' attitudes. The researchers found
that female students were more patient-centered in their willingness to work as equal
partners and to share information with patients. However, no gender difference was found
in attitudes toward understanding patients' emotions and life circumstances.
Patient-centeredness also was associated with a desire to practice in the community and to
enter primary care practice.
The study results, published in the current issue of the International Journal of
Psychiatry in Medicine, suggest that attitudes toward patient-centeredness versus
doctor-centeredness can be measured reliably. The results also indicate that the PPOS may
be useful not only in measuring attitudes among medical students, but also in better
understanding dimensions of physician-patient relationships.
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The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine is published
quarterly by Baywood Publishing Company and covers biopsychosocial aspects of primary
care. For information about the journal, contact Thomas E. Oxman, MD, at (603) 650-6147.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Petrina Chong
Director of Communications
202.387.2829
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