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Wiley InterScience

Journal of General Internal Medicine

Journal of General Internal Medicine

Volume 18 Issue 8, Pages 624 - 633

Published Online: 11 Aug 2003

© 2006 by the Society of General Internal Medicine. All rights reserved



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Dimensions of Patient-provider Communication and Diabetes Self-care in an Ethnically Diverse Population
John D. Piette, PhD , Dean Schillinger, MD , Michael B. Potter, MD , and Michele Heisler, MD, MPA
 Received from the Center for Practice Management and Outcomes Research, VA Ann Arbor Health Care System (JDP, MH), and the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan (JDP, MH), Ann Arbor, Mich; the Primary Care Research Center, San Francisco General Hospital (DS), and the Department of Family and Community Medicine (MBP), University of California–San Francisco, San Francisco, Calif.
Address correspondence and requests for reprints to Dr. Piette: Center for Practice Management and Outcomes Research; VA Ann Arbor Health Care System, P.O. Box 130170, Ann Arbor, MI, 48113-0170 (e-mail: jpiette@umich.edu).
Copyright 2003 by the Society of General Internal Medicine
KEYWORDS
diabetes mellitus • self-care • communication barriers • access to care • chronic disease management • quality of care

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:Patient-provider communication is essential for effective care of diabetes and other chronic illnesses. However, the relative impact of general versus disease-specific communication on self-management is poorly understood, as are the determinants of these 2 communication dimensions.

DESIGN:Cross-sectional survey.

SETTING:Three VA heath care systems, 1 county health care system, and 1 university-based health care system.

PATIENTS:Seven hundred fifty-two diabetes patients were enrolled. Fifty-two percent were nonwhite, 18% had less than a high-school education, and 8% were primarily Spanish-speaking.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:Patients' assessments of providers' general and diabetes-specific communication were measured using validated scales. Self-reported foot care; and adherence to hypoglycemic medications, dietary recommendations, and exercise were measured using standard items. General and diabetes-specific communication reports were only moderately correlated (r = .35) and had differing predictors. In multivariate probit analyses, both dimensions of communication were independently associated with self-care in each of the 4 areas examined. Sociodemographically vulnerable patients (racial and language minorities and those with less education) reported communication that was as good or better than that reported by other patients. Patients receiving most of their diabetes care from their primary provider and patients with a longer primary care relationship reported better general communication. VA and county clinic patients reported better diabetes-specific communication than did university clinic patients.

CONCLUSIONS:General and diabetes-specific communication are related but unique facets of patient-provider interactions, and improving either one may improve self-management. Providers in these sites are communicating successfully with vulnerable patients. These findings reinforce the potential importance of continuity and differences among VA, county, and university health care systems as determinants of patient-provider communication.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1046/j.1525-1497.2003.31968.x About DOI

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