INTRODUCTION Medical doctors in Denmark are clinically challenged by ethnic minority patients, resulting in delayed or incorrect treatments. Apart from language barriers, little is known about the nature of the challenges presented by ethnic minority patients. The present study investigated the level of agreement between the patients' main problems, doctors' referral notes and patient-reported problems documented at a hospital-based migrant health outpatient clinic. METHODS A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted on 150 patients referred to the Migrant Health Clinic (MHC), Odense University Hospital, Denmark. The study was based on a full "Problem list" that was co-produced with the patient. Cohen's kappa (κ) and Chamberlain's proportionate positive agreement (pppa) were calculated for the medical and socioeconomic problems described in the referrals and MHC notes, respectively. RESULTS Significant agreement between patient and referring doctor was found for only two health complaints: musculoskeletal pain (κ = 0.43 and pppa = 0.69) and Type 2 diabetes mellitus (κ = 0.71 and pppa = 0.59). CONCLUSIONS Doctors and patients rarely agree on the patients' health problems. Patient engagement such as co-production of care may potentially produce the time and resources needed to help doctors identify the patients' priorities and describe them in referrals. FUNDING The Novo Nordisk Foundation granted a pregraduate scholarship to cover the salary of the corresponding author. TRIAL REGISTRATION not relevant.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!