Factors influencing trust in doctors: a community segmentation strategy for quality improvement in healthcare
- PMID: 24302512
- PMCID: PMC3855707
- DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004115
Factors influencing trust in doctors: a community segmentation strategy for quality improvement in healthcare
Abstract
Background: Trust is a forward-looking covenant between the patient and the doctor where the patient optimistically accepts his/her vulnerability. Trust is known to improve the clinical outcomes.
Objectives: To explore the factors that determine patients' trust in doctors and to segment the community based on factors which drive their trust.
Setting: Resource-poor urban and rural settings in Tamil Nadu, a state in southern India.
Participants: A questionnaire was administered to a sample of 625 adult community-dwelling respondents from four districts of Tamil Nadu, India, chosen by multistage sampling strategy.
Outcome measures: The outcomes were to understand the main domains of factors influencing trust in doctors and to segment the community based on which of these domains predominantly influenced their trust.
Results: Factor analysis revealed five main categories, namely, comfort with the doctor, doctor with personal involvement with the patient, behaviourally competent doctor, doctor with a simple appearance and culturally competent doctor, which explained 49.3% of the total variance. Using k-means cluster analysis the respondents were segmented into four groups, namely, those who have 'comfort-based trust', 'emotionally assessed trust', who were predominantly older and belonging to lower socioeconomic status, those who had 'personal trust', who were younger people from higher socioeconomic strata of the community and the group who had 'objectively assessed trust', who were younger women.
Conclusions: Trust in doctors seems to be influenced by the doctor's behaviuor, perceived comfort levels, personal involvement with the patient, and to a lesser extent by cultural competence and doctor's physical appearance. On the basis of these dimensions, the community can be segmented into distinct groups, and trust building can happen in a strategic manner which may lead to improvement in perceived quality of care.
Keywords: Public Health; Social Medicine.
Figures
References
-
- Ahnquist J, Wamala SP, Lindstrom M. What has trust in the health-care system got to do with psychological distress? Analyses from the national Swedish survey of public health. Int J Qual Health C 2010;22:250–8 - PubMed
-
- Mohseni M, Lindstrom M. Social capital, trust in the health-care system and self-rated health: the role of access to health care in a population-based study. Soc Sci Med 2007;64:1373–83 - PubMed
-
- Trachtenberg F, Dugan E, Hall MA. How patients trust relates to their involvement in medical care. J Fam Pract 2005;54:344–52 - PubMed
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources