AI Article Synopsis

  • The relationship between doctors and patients is important for getting good treatment, and what doctors wear can change how patients view them.
  • In this study, medical students either wore fancy clothes or scrubs to see how patients reacted to them.
  • Younger patients didn't care much about the students' outfits, but older patients thought students in scrubs looked less knowledgeable and professional.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Patient compliance and outcomes have been shown to be influenced by the quality of the doctor-patient relationship. In addition, the effect of physician attire on the patient's perception of the physician has been long appreciated. Data shows that professional attire is preferred by patients. Whereas treating physicians are the backbone of patient management, medical students are often a patient's first encounter in a teaching clinic. Patient perception of the student may impact their rating of the attending physician. Despite this, medical students are often dressed wearing scrubs in surgery clinic. The purpose of this study was to determine if patient perception of medical students would be affected by the students' attire.

Methods: A 7-item, validated professionalism scale was used to survey surgery clinic patients whose initial examinations were performed by a medical student. Students were blinded and randomly assigned to wear professional attire versus scrubs. Patients' responses of 'strongly agree' were compared to lower ratings for each item.

Results: One hundred twenty-three patients completed our survey, 63 (51.2%) wearing scrubs and 60 (48.8%) in professional attire. The average age was 49.7 ± 15.8 years. In the professional attire group, there was no significant association for any of the 7 items. However, in the scrubs group, all 7 items were significant such that a higher proportion of patients under the age of 60 rated medical students wearing scrubs higher than did patients aged 60 and above.

Conclusion: Students in scrubs were perceived to be less knowledgeable, competent, and professional by older patients. In contrast, younger patients seemed unaffected by the dress of medical students in clinic. Older patients may judge the medical community's growing acceptance of more casual attire in the workplace as less professional, potentially affecting patient satisfaction. Surgical educators should require a standard of professional attire for students in clinic.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsurg.2020.04.016DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
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  • Researchers wanted to see how athletic trainers, physical therapists, and their students feel about how appearance affects professionalism in their work.
  • Most people thought that the healthcare workers in the photos looked professional, but there were some differences in opinions between students and working professionals.
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