Soc
Sci Med 1995 Dec;41(12):1639-45
Correlates of health care satisfaction in inner-city patients with hypertension
and chronic renal insufficiency.
Harris LE, Luft FC, Rudy DW, Tierney WM.
Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis,
USA.
Barriers to effective health care are potential contributors to the increased
prevalence of hypertension and hypertension-related renal disease observed
in black patients. We have enrolled 333 primarily elderly (mean age 69
years) black (87%) patients with hypertension and chronic renal insufficiency
into a prospective randomized trial testing the effect of intense multidisciplinary
management on progression of chronic renal insufficiency. These patients
have an average 6 years of education and $400-$800 monthly household income:
57% have diabetes. Our baseline data include the Patient Satisfaction
Questionnaire administered by home interviewers who also recorded sociodemographic
data, medications and questionnaires regarding medication compliance and
symptoms related to anti-hypertensive drugs. Inpatient and outpatient
vital signs, test results and diagnoses came from patients' computerized
medical records. We used multiple linear regression to identify correlates
of overall satisfaction. We also analyzed three subscales: access to care,
financial aspects and interpersonal manner of physicians. We included
only variables with univariate correlations (P < 0.05) in the models.
Decreased overall satisfaction correlated with more symptoms related to
anti-hypertensive drugs (P < 0.001), lower medication compliance (P
= 0.01), and higher diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.08). Decreased satisfaction
with access to care correlated with more symptoms related to anti-hypertensive
drugs (P < 0.001) and decreased medication compliance (P = 0.08). Decreased
satisfaction with financial aspects of care correlated with more symptoms
related to anti-hypertensive drugs (P < 0.001), lower medication compliance
(P = 0.01) and more proteinuria (P = 0.02). Finally, decreased satisfaction
with interpersonal manner of physicians correlated with lower medication
compliance (P < 0.001), lower albumin (P = 0.01) and sodium (P = 0.04),
and higher diastolic blood pressure (P = 0.04). These cross-sectional
baseline data describe a group of mostly black inner-city patients with
hypertension and chronic renal insufficiency in whom decreased satisfaction
with care correlates with decreased medication compliance, increased symptoms
related to anti-hypertensive drug therapy, higher diastolic blood pressure
and more proteinuria. Our prospective study may help determine whether
improving satisfaction improves compliance and blood pressure control,
and forestalls complications in this high-risk population.
Publication Types: Clinical Trial; Randomized Controlled Trial
PMID: 8746863 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]