Patients’ Preference for Physician Attire in the Internal Medicine Outpatient Department

Objective. To investigate patients’ preference and the attitude towards physician attire in an internal medicine clinic in China. Methods. This study was conducted from 1 January 2021 to 30 June 2021 in a tertiary care hospital in China. We surveyed 126 patients in the hospital with 6 sets of pictur...

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Published inBioMed research international Vol. 2023; no. 1; p. 2992888
Main Authors Zou, Yiyan, Wang, Yiyou, Song, Yang, Liu, Sen, Zhang, Zhiyuan, Wang, Limei, Zhang, Jieshi, Geng, Ruixuan, Zheng, Zhibo, Chen, Yeye
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Hindawi 2023
Hindawi Limited
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Summary:Objective. To investigate patients’ preference and the attitude towards physician attire in an internal medicine clinic in China. Methods. This study was conducted from 1 January 2021 to 30 June 2021 in a tertiary care hospital in China. We surveyed 126 patients in the hospital with 6 sets of pictures of commonly worn physician attires in the hospital setting with a two-part questionnaire. The first part listed respondent demographics to collect basic information. The second part of the questionnaire was administered to adult patients who received care in the internal medicine clinics (outpatients). Survey forms collected demographic data (age, gender, patient age, education, marital status, and employment status), asked questions regarding 6 specific attires (scrubs, scrubs and white coat, casual, casual and white coat, business suit, and formal and white coat), and behavioral items (professional, responsible, reliable, knowledgeable, succession rate, and medical safety), finally, to assess the preference of attire on overall perception. Results. Scrubs and white coat scored the highest through 6 domains about physicians’ attire (professional, reliable, responsible, knowledgeable, medical safety, and succession rate, p<0.05 for all comparisons). A casual suit without a white coat was the least preferred across the surveyed attributes. There was a significant preference gap between wearing a white coat and not wearing a white coat (p<0.001). Physician attire to white coat was considered as more professional, reliable, responsible, knowledgeable, having greater medical safety, and a higher success rate than attires without white coat. Conclusion. Patients felt that the physician wearing a white coat was better than other attires. Scrubs and white coat was the most popular attire. Hospital or related authorities may promote the standardized wearing of white coats, leading in a greater patient-physician relationship.
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Academic Editor: Supat Chupradit
ISSN:2314-6133
2314-6141
DOI:10.1155/2023/2992888