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Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic

Introduction The purpose of this study is to investigate patient preferences of physician attire in an outpatient military ophthalmology clinic to determine how these preferences affect patients’ perceptions of physician competence and their overall clinical experience. Materials and methods This st...

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Autores principales: Scheive, Melanie, Gillis, John, Gillis, Sarah, Legault, Gary L
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cureus 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7857148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33552788
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12472
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author Scheive, Melanie
Gillis, John
Gillis, Sarah
Legault, Gary L
author_facet Scheive, Melanie
Gillis, John
Gillis, Sarah
Legault, Gary L
author_sort Scheive, Melanie
collection PubMed
description Introduction The purpose of this study is to investigate patient preferences of physician attire in an outpatient military ophthalmology clinic to determine how these preferences affect patients’ perceptions of physician competence and their overall clinical experience. Materials and methods This study is a prospective survey administered to patients at the ophthalmology clinic at Brooke Army Medical Center. USA. Patients who were willing to participate in a volunteer survey were included in this study. Demographic information and survey questions were utilized in this study along with words and pictures for patients to select a preference in physician attire in the clinic setting (scrubs, military uniform, or civilian professional attire) and surgical setting (surgical cap or a surgical bouffant). The survey asks patients if physician attire impacts patient confidence in physician abilities (yes or no) and if surgeon attire impacts the likelihood of the patient taking the surgeon’s advice (yes or no). Results The demographic distribution includes 57-77 years old participants (53%), females (61%), retirees (49%), and dependent spouses (40%). The racial distribution includes 46% - Caucasian, 20% - African American, 22% - Hispanic, 6 - % Asian, and 6% - other. Most patient appointment types were established follow-up (77%) with only 12% new and 11% walk-in. The survey results (N=308) indicate that most patients (64%) did not have a preference in physician clinical attire, while 22% preferred scrubs, 11% preferred military uniform, and 3% preferred civilian attire. Most patients (66%) did not have a preference for surgical headwear, while 27% preferred the surgical cap, and 7% preferred the surgical bouffant. Only 9% of the patients surveyed indicated that physician attire impacted their confidence in their physician’s ability, and 12% reported that attire impacted the likelihood of taking advice. Conclusions Most patients in an outpatient military ophthalmology clinic do not have a preference for physician attire or surgical headwear when surveyed. The majority of patients did not feel physician attire impacted their perception of physician's ability or their likelihood of taking advice. When indicating a preference, patients tended to prefer scrubs to outpatient civilian attire or military attire and trended towards preferring surgical cap over surgical bouffant for headwear.
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spelling pubmed-78571482021-02-05 Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic Scheive, Melanie Gillis, John Gillis, Sarah Legault, Gary L Cureus Ophthalmology Introduction The purpose of this study is to investigate patient preferences of physician attire in an outpatient military ophthalmology clinic to determine how these preferences affect patients’ perceptions of physician competence and their overall clinical experience. Materials and methods This study is a prospective survey administered to patients at the ophthalmology clinic at Brooke Army Medical Center. USA. Patients who were willing to participate in a volunteer survey were included in this study. Demographic information and survey questions were utilized in this study along with words and pictures for patients to select a preference in physician attire in the clinic setting (scrubs, military uniform, or civilian professional attire) and surgical setting (surgical cap or a surgical bouffant). The survey asks patients if physician attire impacts patient confidence in physician abilities (yes or no) and if surgeon attire impacts the likelihood of the patient taking the surgeon’s advice (yes or no). Results The demographic distribution includes 57-77 years old participants (53%), females (61%), retirees (49%), and dependent spouses (40%). The racial distribution includes 46% - Caucasian, 20% - African American, 22% - Hispanic, 6 - % Asian, and 6% - other. Most patient appointment types were established follow-up (77%) with only 12% new and 11% walk-in. The survey results (N=308) indicate that most patients (64%) did not have a preference in physician clinical attire, while 22% preferred scrubs, 11% preferred military uniform, and 3% preferred civilian attire. Most patients (66%) did not have a preference for surgical headwear, while 27% preferred the surgical cap, and 7% preferred the surgical bouffant. Only 9% of the patients surveyed indicated that physician attire impacted their confidence in their physician’s ability, and 12% reported that attire impacted the likelihood of taking advice. Conclusions Most patients in an outpatient military ophthalmology clinic do not have a preference for physician attire or surgical headwear when surveyed. The majority of patients did not feel physician attire impacted their perception of physician's ability or their likelihood of taking advice. When indicating a preference, patients tended to prefer scrubs to outpatient civilian attire or military attire and trended towards preferring surgical cap over surgical bouffant for headwear. Cureus 2021-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC7857148/ /pubmed/33552788 http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12472 Text en Copyright © 2021, Scheive et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Ophthalmology
Scheive, Melanie
Gillis, John
Gillis, Sarah
Legault, Gary L
Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title_full Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title_fullStr Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title_full_unstemmed Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title_short Patient Perception of Physician Attire in a Military Ophthalmology Clinic
title_sort patient perception of physician attire in a military ophthalmology clinic
topic Ophthalmology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7857148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33552788
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.12472
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