  
	
  
Modest and UnevenPhysician Efforts to Reduce Racial/Ethnic Disparities
News Release 
Feb. 10, 2010 
 
 FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: 
   
  Alwyn Cassil (202) 264-3484 or acassil@hschange.org 
 
 
WASHINGTON, DCWhile many U. S. physicians identify 
  language or cultural barriers as obstacles to providing high-quality patient 
  care, physicians efforts to overcome communication barriers are modest and 
  uneven, according to a new national study released today by the Center for Studying 
  Health System Change (HSC). 
Nearly half (48.6%) of all U.S. physicians in 2008 reported that difficulty 
  communicating with patients because of language or cultural barriers was at 
  least a minor problem affecting their ability to provide high-quality care, 
  though less than 5 percent viewed it as a major problem, according to the study 
  funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF).  
Despite consensus in the medical community about steps physicians can take 
  to address racial and ethnic disparities, physician adoption of several recommended 
  practices to improve care for minority patients ranged from 7 percent reporting 
  they have the capability to track patients preferred language to 40 percent 
  reporting they have received training in minority health issues to slightly 
  more than half reporting their practices provide some interpreter services, 
  the study found. 
"Although disparities certainly stem from factors beyond the physician-patient 
  encounter, the ability of physicians to communicate effectively with patients 
  from diverse backgrounds is important to providing high-quality care," 
  said HSC Senior Researcher James Reschovsky, Ph.D., coauthor of the study with 
  HSC Health Research Analyst Ellyn R. Boukus, M.A. 
Physicians were asked whether their practice provides interpreter services; 
  whether their practice provides patient-education materials in languages other 
  than English; whether they have received training in minority health issues; 
  whether they receive reports containing patient demographic information, such 
  as race or ethnicity; whether their practice has information technology (IT) 
  to identify patients preferred language; and whether they receive reports about 
  the quality of care delivered to minority patients. 
Based on HSCs nationally representative 2008 Health Tracking Physician Survey, 
  the study findings are detailed in a new HSC Issue BriefModest and Uneven: 
  Physician Efforts to Reduce Racial and Ethnic Disparitiesavailable 
  here. Funded by RWJF, the survey includes responses from more than 4,700 
  physicians, and the response rate was 62 percent.  
Other key findings include: 
- While nearly 97 percent of physicians have at least some non-English 
  speaking patients, only slightly more than half of physicians (56%) were in 
  practices that provided interpreter services in 2008. 
 
- Among physicians in practices treating patients with any of four prevalent 
  chronic conditions-asthma, diabetes, congestive heart failure and depression72 
  percent in 2008 reported their practice provides patienteducation materials 
  for at least one of the four conditions. Yet, only 40 percent of physicians 
  in these practices reported providing patient-education materials in languages 
  other than English for at least one of the conditions.
 
- Less than one in four physicians (23%) indicated they receive reports 
  on patient demographics, such as race or ethnicity. Likewise, 22 percent of 
  physicians indicated their practice has IT capable of reporting patients preferred 
  language, but only a third of these physicians (7%) routinely used this capability.
 
- Nearly nine out of 10 physicians lacked a formal means to assess the 
  quality of care provided to patients across racial and ethnic groups. Only 11.8 
  percent of physicians reported access to reports on the quality of care they 
  provide stratified by patient race or ethnicity. 
 
- Physicians in practices with a greater share of minority patients were 
  more likely to adopt each of the measures to address disparities. For example, 
  almost twice as many physicians reported providing interpreter services in practices 
  with a majority of minority patients, relative to those in low-minority practices-less 
  than 10 percent minority patients (72.3% vs. 39.2%). Similarly, there were large 
  differences in provision of patient-education materials in foreign languages 
  (60% vs. 24%), routine use of IT to access patients preferred languages (10.5% 
  vs. 4.3%) and quality reporting by racial/ethnic group (16.8% vs. 8.2%). 
 
- Physicians in solo and group practices were less likely to adopt measures 
  to address disparities than those in institutional practices, such as hospitals, 
  health maintenance organizations (HMOs) and medical schools. For example, nearly 
  90 percent of physicians in group- or staff-model HMOs reported providing interpreter 
  services, compared with 34 percent of physicians in solo or two-physician practices.
 
 
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The Center for Studying Health System Change is a nonpartisan policy research 
  organization committed to providing objective and timely research on the nations 
  changing health system to help inform policy makers and contribute to better 
  health care policy. HSC, based in Washington, D.C., is funded in part by the 
  Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and is affiliated with Mathematica Policy Research.  
  
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