4.5 Article

Do they speak like me? Exploring how perceptions of linguistic difference may influence patient perceptions of healthcare providers

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Medicine, General & Internal

Examination of Stigmatizing Language in the Electronic Health Record

Gracie Himmelstein et al.

Summary: This cross-sectional study found that stigmatizing language in hospital notes varied by medical condition and was more often used to describe non-Hispanic Black patients. Training clinicians to minimize stigmatizing language in the electronic health record might improve patient-clinician relationships and reduce the transmission of bias between clinicians.

JAMA NETWORK OPEN (2022)

Letter Medicine, General & Internal

Race, Ethnicity, and Sex Among Senior Faculty in Radiation Oncology From 2000 to 2019

James R. Janopaul-Naylor et al.

Summary: This cross-sectional study examines the intersections of race, ethnicity, and sex among senior faculty in radiation oncology from 2000 to 2019.

JAMA NETWORK OPEN (2022)

Article Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence

Internet-based tailored virtual human health intervention to promote colorectal cancer screening: design guidelines from two user studies

Mohan Zalake et al.

Summary: The appearance and healthcare role of VH, as well as the use of an animated VH to deliver health information, are found to positively influence user perceptions and intentions to pursue further health information. Design guidelines from these studies can help developers in using VH-based interventions to positively impact user behavior change.

JOURNAL ON MULTIMODAL USER INTERFACES (2021)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

A Pilot Study Examining the Efficacy of Delivering Colorectal Cancer Screening Messages via Virtual Health Assistants

Janice L. Krieger et al.

Summary: The animated virtual healthcare assistant proved more effective than the static virtual healthcare assistant and attention control conditions in increasing patient intentions to discuss colorectal cancer screening with their doctor. The impact of race concordance on screening intentions varied across conditions. Patient race, age, trust in healthcare providers, health literacy, and cancer information overload were significant predictors of screening intentions.

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE (2021)

Editorial Material Medicine, General & Internal

Code Switch

Anita K. Blanchard

NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE (2021)

Article Medicine, General & Internal

Graduate Medical Education, 2019-2020

Sarah E. Brotherton

JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION (2020)

Article Health Care Sciences & Services

Departing from Doctor-Speak: a Perspective on Code-Switching in the Medical Setting

Nathan I. Wood

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE (2019)

Article Public, Environmental & Occupational Health

(Dis)Incentivizing Patient Satisfaction Metrics: The Unintended Consequences of Institutional Bias

Sylk Sotto-Santiago et al.

HEALTH EQUITY (2019)

Article Health Care Sciences & Services

Gendered Expectations: Do They Contribute to High Burnout Among Female Physicians?

Mark Linzer et al.

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE (2018)

Article Linguistics

Unsettling race and language: Toward a raciolinguistic perspective

Jonathan Rosa et al.

LANGUAGE IN SOCIETY (2017)

Article Communication

The fluency principle: Why foreign accent strength negatively biases language attitudes

Marko Dragojevic et al.

COMMUNICATION MONOGRAPHS (2017)

Article Psychology, Applied

SOUNDING DIFFERENT: THE ROLE OF SOCIOLINGUISTIC CUES IN EVALUATING JOB CANDIDATES

Faye K. Cocchiara et al.

HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT (2016)

Article Linguistics

Country Talk

Lauren Hall-Lew et al.

JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LINGUISTICS (2012)

Article Psychology, Social

Criticizing groups from the inside and the outside: An identity perspective on the intergroup sensitivity effect

MJ Hornsey et al.

PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN (2004)

Article Psychology, Social

The effects of status-organizing and social identity processes on patterns of social influence

W Kalkhoff et al.

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY QUARTERLY (2000)