Racial/ethnic differences in physician distrust in the United States

Katrina Armstrong, Karima L Ravenell, Suzanne McMurphy, Mary Putt, Katrina Armstrong, Karima L Ravenell, Suzanne McMurphy, Mary Putt

Abstract

Objectives: We examined the racial/ethnic and geographic variation in distrust of physicians in the United States.

Methods: We obtained data from the Community Tracking Study, analyzing 20 sites where at least 5% of the population was Hispanic and 5% was Black.

Results: In univariate analyses, Blacks and Hispanics reported higher levels of physician distrust than did Whites. Multivariate analyses, however, suggested a complex interaction among sociodemographic variables, city of residence, race/ethnicity, and distrust of physician. In general, lower socioeconomic status (defined as lower income, lower education, and no health insurance) was associated with higher levels of distrust, with men generally reporting more distrust than women. But the strength of these effects was modified by race/ethnicity. We present examples of individual cities in which Blacks reported consistently higher mean levels of distrust than did Whites, consistently lower mean levels of distrust than did Whites, or a mixed relationship dependent on socioeconomic status. In the same cities, Hispanics reported either consistently higher mean levels of distrust relative to Whites or a mixed relationship.

Conclusions: Racial/ethnic differences in physician distrust are less uniform than previously hypothesized, with substantial geographic and individual variation present.

Figures

FIGURE 1—
FIGURE 1—
Geographic variation in distrust scores (means and 95% confidence intervals [CIs]), among Whites (a), Blacks (b), and Hispanics (c): Community Tracking Study, 1998–1999. Note. The means and CIs are plotted on a natural log scale because this is the basis of the Poisson model. The lower axis indicates the equivalent values on the linear scale. Because of the conversion from the log scale, the intervals on the linear axis are not evenly spaced.

Source: PubMed

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