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Table 2 Summary of estimated models testing differences in PCMH domains between Black and non-Latino White Men

From: Identifying disparities in patient-centered care experiences between non-Latino white and black men: results from the 2008-2016 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey

 

Model 1

Model 2

Model 3

Personal primary care provider

 Usual Source of Care (USC)

 Personal Provider

 Provider not a specialist

ns

Enhanced Access to Care

 Easy Phone Access

ns

ns

ns

 Night/Weekend Hours

ns

ns

 Easy Contact After Regular Hours

ns

Patient-Provider (Quality) Communication

 Dr. Listens Carefully

ns

 Dr. Explains Comprehend

ns

 Dr. Shows Respect

ns

 Dr. Spends Enough Time

Care is patient centered

 Dr. Helps Treatment Decisions

 Dr. Asks Other Treatments

ns

ns

ns

 Dr. Explains Options

ns

ns

ns

 Dr. Respects Choices

ns

ns

ns

Care is coordinated by USC

 Go USC for New Health Problems

 Go USC for Preventive

ns

ns

 Go USC for Referral

ns

ns

 Go USC for Ongoing

ns

ns

ns

Care is comprehensive (When needed)

 Immediate Care Received

 Routine Care Received

 Tests Received

 Specialist Care Received

  1. Results are based on survey logistic regression models using non-Latino White and Black participants ages 18–64 years from the 2008–2016 Medical Expenditures Panel Survey. Model 1 is unadjusted. Model 2 adjusts for age. Model 3 is fully adjusted and includes all variables as specified in the covariates section
  2. Indicates statistically significant difference (p < 0.05). “ns” indicates statistically not significant
  3. Detailed information about survey questions, logical skips, and unweighted sample sizes are provided in Additional file 1: Figure S1.