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Assessing Culturally Competent Diabetes Care with Unannounced Standardized Patients Kutob RM, Bormanis J, Crago M, Senf J, Gordon P. Shisslak C. . Randa M. Kutob, MD, MPH John Bormanis , PhD Department of Family and Community Medicine University of Arizona, College of Medicine
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Assessing Culturally Competent Diabetes Care with Unannounced Standardized PatientsKutob RM, Bormanis J, Crago M, Senf J, Gordon P. Shisslak C. Randa M. Kutob, MD, MPH John Bormanis , PhD Department of Family and Community Medicine University of Arizona, College of Medicine rkutob@email.arizona.edu johnbormanisphd@comcast.net
The Problem More effective diabetes care is desperately needed and The provider-patient relationship is a key point of intervention.
Scope of the Problem Diabetes and Pre-diabetes 18.8 million with diabetes 7.0 million undiagnosed +79.0 million w/pre-diabetes ______________________= 104.8 million!!!! Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Diabetes Fact Sheet: national estimates and general information on diabetes and prediabetes in the United States, 2011. Atlanta, GA: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2011.
Diabetes Disparities • African Americans, American Indians, and Hispanic/Latinos have higher rates of diabetes (CDC, 2011) • African Americans have a 2–4 times higher rate of renal disease, blindness, and amputations.(Peek, 2007) • U.S. Latinos have a higher rate renal disease and retinopathy. (Peek, 2007) • African Americans, American Indians, and Hispanic/Latinos have higher diabetes-related death rates (AHRQ, 2003)
Kleinman, 1980 Kutob, Senf, Harris, 2009
Unannounced Standardized Patient (SPs) Study What would a culturally competent physician do during the office visit, and which of these behaviors could be measured by an outside observer?
Standardized Patients (SPs) • Trained “fake” patients • Used extensively in medical education • Objective Structured Clinical Examination • Typically students know that they are being evaluated by a SP • In our study physicians did not know.
Study Design Overview • Unannounced SPs were sent to the offices of family and internal medicine physicians • 4 University-based clinics • 1 Community-based clinic • All physicians were consented. Study was approved by the University of Arizona Institutional Review Board.
The Standardized Patient Checklist • Developed by experts in anthropology, endocrinology, cultural competence, family medicine, internal medicine, Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) development, pediatrics, ethnic minority health care, and research methodology • For an adult SP with a chief complaint of diabetes • The checklist included items modeled on Kleinman’s cross-cultural office visit
SP Checklist: 7 Subscales, 41 dichotomous Items • Explanatory Model Elicitation • Cultural Knowledge • Non-judgmental behavior • Sharing the Biomedical Model • Patient Empowerment • Diabetes Specific Behaviors • Arizona Clinical Interview Rating Scale
Explanatory Model Elicitation • Asked the patient’s view of illness • Asked the patient’s view of illness treatment • Asked about patient’s use of other medical/traditional providers • Asked about family support • Asked about community support • Asked abut gender role in family and how this influences care
Cultural Knowledge • Indicated knowledge when asked, “Is it true that Mexican Americans have higher rates of diabetes?” • Addressed health beliefs regarding fatalism • Indicated knowledge when asked, “I have been eating nopalitos. Have you heard of those.” • MD addressed health beliefs, before patient brought up • MD brought up higher rates of diabetes in Mexican Americans before SP asked. • MD brought up nopalitos before MD asked
Non-judgmental Behavior • Did not threaten insulin if did not take medications • Did not condemn use of alternative treatments • Did not condemn use of alternative healers • Was non-judgmental in response to elevated hemoglobin A1c • Did not threaten complications if did not take medications
Sharing the Biomedical Model Shared knowledge about… • The treatment of diabetes • The benefits of exercise • The benefits of weight control/diet • The benefits of glycemic control • The pathophysiology of diabetes • Prevention of diabetes complications
Patient Empowerment • Asked about patient’s fears about diabetes • Asked patient to set her own goals • Asked about barriers to care
Diabetes Specific Behaviors • Ordered hemoglobin A1c • Ordered urinary microalbumin • Made appropriate referral to ophthalmology • Performed monofilament test • Put patient on aspirin
The Arizona Clinical Interviewing Scale • Repeated questions only to verify/clarify • Used no medical terms unless defined immediately without being asked • Made sure patient understood future plans • Avoided use of leading/multiple/why questions • Avoided giving premature assessment and plan • Avoided verbal/nonverbal judgment cues/reactions • Used appropriate body contact • Was aware of patient’s “space” • Patient was comfortable with eye contact • Gave nonverbal positive reinforcement
The Clinical Scenario • Mexican American woman who did not have health insurance • Recently diagnosed with diabetes • Just moved from a different state • Needed to establish care with a new physician • Little understanding of diabetes • Had a glucometer, but not using it • Symptomatic • She thought hemoglobin A1c value was 11
The SPs Explanatory Model • Derived from qualitative studies in Mexican American populations • Diabetes ran in her family, and she felt that there was no cure and that it could not be controlled. • Her spouse and other family memberswere supportive. • She had consulted her grandmother, a curandera. • She was eating nopalitos.
Total Score • 70.7±11.0%, with a range of 43.9 to 90.2% • No significant differences by any demographic or other characteristics.
Correlations • Non-Judgmental Behavior and Sharing the Biomedical Model, Spearman’s rho= -.403, p=.037. • Sharing the Biomedical Model and Patient Empowerment, rho=.717, p<.001. • Explanatory Model Elicitation and Diabetes-Specific Behaviors subscale, rho=.466, p=.014. • The item, “Asked patient’s view of illness treatment” was associated with higher levels of cross-cultural training, p=.032.
Limitations • Small study • One time visit only • Many university-based physicians with high levels of cultural competence training
Conclusions • Providers asked about explanatory models • Providers asked about social support less frequently • How providers deliver the message (the biomedical model) is important! • Medical student and resident training in motivational interviewing
Conclusions Our results suggest that culturally competent care and good diabetes care are intertwined.
Acknowledgements • The authors would like to thank Dr. John Harris, Jr. for his contributions to the design of this research project. • This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (R41 DK62569). • Dr. Kutob’s time also supported by the Arizona Area Health Education Centers’ Clinical Outcomes and Comparative Effectiveness Research Fellowship.