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Journal of Black Psychology
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Gender Disparities in Physician-Patient Communication Among African American Patients in Primary Care

M. Robin DiMatteo

University of California, Riverside

Carolyn B. Murray

University of California, Riverside, carolyn.murray{at}ucr.edu

Summer L. Williams

University of California, Riverside

This study investigates the role of gender in physician-patient communication among African American patients in primary care. Patients (N = 137) aged 33 to 67 were nested within 79 southern California primary care physicians' practices. In 48 interactions (35%), the physician was female and/or a member of a minority group. The study directly assessed gender differences through audiotaped physician-patient interactions as well as by measuring patients' and physicians' perceptions of their visit. This study employed a multi-informant design, in which independent raters assessed both physician and patient in audiotaped interactions, and both physician and patient self-reported on aspects of their visit. Discussions of prevention and health promotion were found to be significantly more common with male patients than with female patients but only when the physician was a nonminority male; these disparities disappeared when the physician was female and/or minority. Findings are discussed in terms of physician training, particularly for men and nonminorities.

Key Words: physician-patient communication • gender disparities

Journal of Black Psychology, Vol. 35, No. 2, 204-227 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0095798409333599


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