Published April 3, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Changes in Patient Perceptions of the Provider Most Involved in Care During COVID-19 and Corresponding Effects on Patient Trust

  • 1. University of Chicago

Description

During COVID-19 routine clinical operations were disrupted, including limits on the types of providers allowed to perform in-person care and frequency of times they could enter a patient's room. Whether these changes affected patients' trust in the care they received during hospitalization is unknown. Hospitalized patients on the general medicine service were called after discharge and asked to identify who (attending, resident, etc.) was most involved in their inpatient care, and how much trust they had in the physician caring for them. During the pandemic patients were more likely to report attending physicians (29% to 34%) and nurses (30% to 35%), and less likely to report residents/interns (8.1% to 6.5%) or medical students (1.7% to 1.4%) as most involved in their care (chi-squared test, p = 0.04). Patients reporting their attending physician as most involved in their care were more likely to report trusting their doctor (chi-squared test, p < 0.01). As such, trends in medical education that limit trainees' time in direct patient care may affect the development of clinical and interpersonal skills necessary to establish patient trust.

Files

Changes-in-Patient-Perceptions-of-the-Provider-Most-Involved-in-Care-During-COVID-19-and-Corresponding-Effects-on-Patient-Trust.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1177/23743735231166501
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5739

Funding

NIH/NHLBI
K23 award
NIH/NHLBI
K24 award
NIH/NIA
P30 award

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division, Pritzker School of Medicine
Department(s)
Medicine