Introduction
Provision of patient-centered culturally sensitive health care (PC-CSHC) has been highlighted as a best practice approach for reducing health disparities. PC-CSHC is defined as health care that embodies the characteristics identified by culturally diverse patients as enabling them to feel comfortable with, trusting of, and respected by their health care providers, office staff, and health care environment (Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Rice, Marsiske, Jones and Herman2011).
While the importance of PC-CSHC is rarely disputed, there is a lack of instruments that reliably measure PC-CSHC; furthermore, there are no known published measures that exclusively assess the cultural competence or sensitivity of front desk office staff.
The majority of available research pertaining to cultural competence and cultural sensitivity focuses exclusively on health care providers. Provider cultural sensitivity has been positively associated with patient satisfaction (Harris et al., Reference Harris, Luft, Rudy and Tierney1995; Joffe et al., Reference Joffe, Manocchia, Weeks and Cleary2003; Beach et al., Reference Beach, Saha and Cooper2006) However, such studies encompass much more than isolated patient-provider interactions. On average, patients seeking outpatient care spend ~19 min with their providers and considerably more time in office waiting areas (Mechanic, Reference Mechanic, McAlpine and Rosenthal2001). Front desk office staff members serve as the first and last points of contact for patients during health care visits. Additionally, front desk office staff members regularly collect sensitive health information from patients such as the nature of the visit and personal health histories. Furthermore, front desk office staff members often communicate messages between patients and providers that include information pertaining to health concerns, treatment recommendations, and medical referrals.
Tucker et al. (Reference Tucker, Herman, Pedersen, Higley, Montrichard and Ivery2003) found, through focus groups with culturally diverse adults, that the behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge of front desk office staff were major influences on these adults’ perceptions regarding what constitutes PC-CSHC. Sofaer and Firminger (Reference Sofaer and Firminger2005) also confirmed the important role of front desk office staff in patient-perceived culturally sensitive health care.
Despite these findings there is a paucity of research pertaining to front desk office staff in health care delivery and no known published studies have investigated the cultural sensitivity of these staff members. This fact is in part due to the lack of reliable and valid measures to assess this cultural sensitivity. The pilot Tucker – Culturally Sensitive Health Care Office Staff Inventory – Patient Form (T-CSHCOSI-PF) is a practical 18-item inventory designed for patients to complete to evaluate the patient-defined cultural sensitivity of front desk office staff.
The pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF is novel in that its items are generated by culturally diverse patients – the individuals who are the true experts on the specific behaviors, attitudes, and knowledge that demonstrate cultural competence and sensitivity (Mirsu-Paun et al., Reference Mirsu-Paun, Tucker, Herman and Hernandez2010). Specifically, the items on the T-CSHCOSI-PF are based on data obtained from focus groups with racially/ethnically diverse patients (ie, African American, Hispanic/Latino, and non-Hispanic white patients) in which these patients were asked to identify specific office staff behaviors and attitudes that enable them to feel comfortable with, respected by, and trusting of their health care office staff. After collecting this focus group data, an independent sample of racially/ethnically diverse patients rated the importance of the items using a 1–5 rating scale. Only the items with mean ratings of 3 or higher were used to construct the pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF (Tucker et al., Reference Tucker, Mirsu-Paun, Van den Berg, Ferdinand, Jones, Curry, Rooks, Walter and Beato2007). Therefore, the T-CSHCOSI-PF is a patient-centered inventory. This patient-centered approach is novel in that it addresses known limitations of existing cultural competence and sensitivity measures by (1) including items that are data based and (2) developing the inventory based on the perspective of patients rather than the perspective of health care researchers and professionals (Mirsu-Paun et al., Reference Mirsu-Paun, Tucker, Herman and Hernandez2010).
The specific objectives of the present study are to: (a) confirm the factor structure of the pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF, (b) determine the internal consistency of the resulting T-CSHCOSI-PF factor(s)/subscale(s), and (c) examine the construct validity of the T-CSHCOSI-PF by analyzing the correlation between patients’ scores on this inventory and their scores on a measure of patient satisfaction.
Methods
Participants
Study participants were 1648 patients from among 67 health care sites that represent the four major geographical regions in the United States (ie, Northeast, Southeast, West, and Mid-West). Of the 67 health care sites recruited, 71.4% were community health care centers, 12.5% were private practices, 7.1% were health departments, 5.4% were hospitals, and 3.6% were other types of health care sites (eg, halfway houses for rehabilitation). Participant inclusion criteria included: (a) being at least 18 years old; (b) being a patient at one of the participating health care sites for at least one year; (c) being able to communicate either verbally or in written form in English or Spanish; and (d) signing an informed consent form to participate in the study.
The participant sample was ethnically diverse; specifically, 19% were African American, 35% were White American, 33% were Hispanic, and 13% were of Other/Non-specified race/ethnicity. The sample includes 1052 women, 527 men, and 69 participants who did not report their gender. This gender distribution represents national trends in health care utilization, as women are more likely than men to seek and utilize medical care (Owens, Reference Owens2008; Cohen and Bloom, Reference Cohen and Bloom2010). Additional demographic information is included in Table 1.
Measures
Patient volunteers confidentially completed an assessment battery that included a Demographic Data Questionnaire (DDQ), the pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF, and the Patient-Satisfaction Questionnaire – Short Form (PSQ-18).
The DDQ was created by the principal investigator for the present study to collect general demographic information on each participant including age, gender, race/ethnicity, marital status, household income, level of education, and employment status.
The pilot 31-item T-CSHCOSI-PF assesses patients’ perceived levels of patient-centered cultural sensitivity among front desk office staff. In this inventory, patients are asked to rate how much they agree that the front desk office staff members at their health care center or office show the listed characteristics and behaviors. All items are rated on a Likert scale ranging from 1=strongly disagree to 4=strongly agree.
The Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire – Short Form is an 18-item scale that assesses seven different dimensions (subscales) of patient satisfaction with medical care (Owens, Reference Owens2008). For this study, the general satisfaction and accessibility and convenience subscales were selected to help determine the validity of the T-CSHCOSI-PF, as these two scales capture the health care attributes most closely related to office staff members’ cultural sensitivity. Items on each subscale of the PSQ-18 are rated on a Likert scale ranging from 1=strongly agree to 4=strongly disagree. In an ethnically diverse sample, these three subscales demonstrated acceptable internal consistency reliability (Marshall and Hays, Reference Marshall and Hays1994).
Procedure
After Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval for this study was obtained, internet searches were used to identify health care organizations and sites located in the four major geographical regions of the United States. Health care sites that agreed to participate obtained IRB approvals at their respective sites and identified a staff person to serve as a data collection coordinator (DCC). The DCC was responsible for identifying two community members to serve as data collectors. The DCC was mailed all study materials pertaining to participant recruitment and study implementation. Training on recruitment and study implementation was conducted via telephone.
Data collectors recruited participants by disseminating flyers to patients in the waiting rooms at their respective health care sites. Research participation involved reading and signing an informed consent form, completing a set of questionnaires (which took ~45 min), and placing the set of completed questionnaires in the provided envelope. Following the data collection at each health care site, the DCC at that site collected the signed consent forms and the envelopes that contained the completed questionnaires and mailed both to the researchers. Questionnaires were kept separate from consent forms to maintain participant confidentiality.
Results
Data analyses were performed to determine the factor structure, reliability, and validity of the pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF. An initial examination of item distributions indicated that all items were negatively skewed and positively leptokurtic, reflecting endorsement of higher levels of agreement on most items. Given these departures from normality, Blom14 transformation was used to reduce skewness and kurtosis for all items. Skewness remained significant for most variables although it was generally reduced by 50% or more for all variables; however, kurtosis was no longer significant. Next, three randomly constituted item parcels were created. The parceling approach was selected to preserve the internal consistency of the expected factors (Little et al., Reference Little, Cunningham, Shahar and Widaman2002). Finally, using these three item parcels, a confirmatory factor analysis of a proposed three-factor structure was performed (Arbuckle, Reference Arbuckle2007). A preliminary extraction of three factors indicated that the third factor explained minimal incremental variance (3%), and had only three indicators with factor loadings in excess of 0.50. Subsequently, an 18 item, two-factor solution was explored, and this explained 68% of the total variance in the indicators. Finally, a confirmatory factor analysis was conducted of the proposed 18-item, two-factor structure using full information maximum likelihood of the available sample. Model fit was generally adequate to excellent. The model χ 2 statistic was significant [c2(134)=1751.82, P<0.001], and was more than twice the model degrees of freedom (c2/df ratio=13.07). All fit indices exceeded 0.9 (NFI=0.94, RFI=0.92, IFI=0.94, TLI=0.93, CFI=0.94). The RMSEA was 0.09, which was significantly greater than the criterion value 0.05 (P<0.001). Thus, most indicators were suggestive of adequate model fit. All factor loadings were significantly greater than zero. The two factors were correlated, r=0.81. Table 2 shows the standardized factor loadings for the estimated solution, which were all significantly greater than zero.
Note: All loadings significantly greater than zero, P<0.001.
Internal consistency (Cronbach’s α) was computed using the Blom-transformed scores for the 18-items that were retained for the two-factor solution. The T-CSHCOSI-PF evidenced excellent internal consistency reliability for the Sensitivity/Interpersonal Skill subscale (α=0.97), the Professionalism, Punctuality and Responsiveness subscale (α=0.95), and the total measure (α=0.97).
A Pearson correlation analysis was conducted to examine the association between (a) the factor mean scores for the two factors comprising the T-CSHCOSI-PF (ie, the mean scores for the sensitivity and interpersonal skills subscale and for the professionalism, punctuality, and responsiveness subscale), and (b) the subscale mean scores for two relevant subscales of the PSQ-18 (ie, mean scores for the general satisfaction subscale and the accessibility and convenience subscale). Results revealed significant positive correlations between the mean scores for the two factors of the T-CSHCOSI-PF and the subscale mean scores for the two relevant subscales of the PSQ-18. Specifically, the mean score of the sensitivity/interpersonal skill subscale of the T-CSHCOSI-PF had a significant positive correlation with both the mean general satisfaction subscale of the PSQ-18 (r=0.37, P<0.001) and the mean accessibility and convenience subscale of the PSQ-18 (r=0.31, P<0.001). Additionally, the mean score of the professionalism, punctuality, and responsiveness subscale of the T-CSHCOSI-PF had a significant positive correlation with the mean general satisfaction subscale of the PSQ-18 (r=0.39, P<0.001) and the accessibility and convenience subscale of the PSQ-18 (r=0.37, P<0.001). The finding that these significant correlations fall between 0.3 and 0.4 indicates that there is both the expected positive association between cultural sensitivity and patient satisfaction, but that there is also substantial unique variance between the two constructs.
Discussion
Health care research often highlights the importance of cultural sensitivity, yet fails to provide guidance in defining and assessing cultural sensitivity. Additionally, cultural sensitivity is almost always discussed in reference to health care providers, ignoring the patient care that is provided by the front desk office staff. The pilot T-CSHCOSI-PF was developed as a tool for enabling patients to evaluate the cultural sensitivity of front desk office staff. The psychometric properties of the T-CSHCOSI-PF were investigated in the present study.
Factor analyses revealed two subscales of the T-CSHCOSI-PF that total 18 items, which is practical in regard to length. The total measure and the two subscales were found to have excellent internal consistency reliability and validity. These findings support use of the T-CSHCOSI-PF by patients to evaluate the cultural sensitivity of health care office staff. This patient feedback data can be used by the appropriate health care staff and/or consultants to develop cultural sensitivity trainings for health care office staff that has potential for improving the health care satisfaction of patients who experience this care. Such an outcome is important given that patients’ health care satisfaction has been positively associated with patient treatment adherence and clinical outcomes (Arbuckle, Reference Arbuckle2007; Street et al., Reference Street, Makoul, Arora and Epstein2009, Reference Tucker, Arthur, Wall, Roncoroni and SanchezTucker et al. , Reference Tucker, Arthur, Wall, Roncoroni and Sanchezin press).
Giving patients the opportunity to complete the T-CSHCOSI-PF may also promote their health self-efficacy. Increased health self-efficacy among patients is a desirable outcome given that patient self-efficacy has been associated with higher levels of health care satisfaction and improved health outcomes (Utz et al., Reference Utz, Shuster, Merwin and Williams1994). Furthermore, engagement of patients in the health care process (eg, having patients complete the T-CSHCOSI-PF) has been linked to improved clinical outcomes (Rocco et al., Reference Rocco, Scher, Basberg, Yalamanchi and Baker-Genaw2011).
Given that financial incentives often drive health care quality improvements, it is important to note that use of the T-CSHCOSI-PF may also increase a health care organization’s profits and/or decrease its care-related costs. Brach and Fraser (Reference Brach and Fraser2002) highlighted the financial incentives associated with providing culturally competent/sensitive health care. These incentives include increased market share by appealing to minority consumers and enhanced appeal to public purchasers, as culturally competent/sensitive care is associated with increased prevention services, more appropriate care, and fewer unnecessary screenings and treatments.
Limitations and strengths
There are three notable limitations of the current study. First, this study only collected data from patients who were currently attending a health care site. Therefore, patients who may have been dissatisfied with their care and did not return and patients’ who do not receive regular health care may not be represented in the present study. The second limitation is that health care sites were not randomly selected. Given the difficultly in recruiting such a large number of health care sites from across the United States, multiple rather than random recruitment strategies were necessary. The third limitation is that the T-CSHCOSI-PF is a self-report inventory. Self-report measures may potentially encourage socially desirable responses, such as under-reporting or over-reporting the occurrence of the behaviors and attitudes that are listed on the T-CSHCOSI-PF. However, self-report measures are commonly used in health care quality research and are often preferred for their comprehensiveness, convenience, and cost-effectiveness (DiMatteo, Reference DiMatteo2002).
The present study also has important strengths, including (a) the large number of participating health care sites, (b) the inclusion of a variety of health care sites from diverse geographic locations across the United States, and (c) a large sample of culturally diverse patient participants. Additionally, health care sites were included that serve low-income patients and racial/ethnic minority patients – groups that are often underrepresented in health care quality research.
Future directions
The provided evidence of the strong psychometric properties of the T-CSHCOSI-PF supports conducting further research to establish its validity and reliability when used by various patients in diverse health care settings multiple times over an extended period of time and after the inventory has been translated into multiple different languages. Such research will further ensure use of the T-CSHCOSI-PF in health care sites. The resulting data may inform evaluations of front desk office staff as well as the development of culturally sensitive health care training for these staff. Such training has the potential to improve health care services to culturally diverse patients and increase health care utilization by underserved populations.
Acknowledgment
Gabriel Linn served as editorial assistant in the preparation of this manuscript.
Financial Support
This work was supported by Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (Grant # 59281).
Conflicts of Interest
None.