Justice in health care decision-making: Patients' appraisals of health care providers and health plan representatives

M Fondacaro, B Frogner, R Moos - Social justice research, 2005 - Springer
Social justice research, 2005Springer
This study describes the development of two versions of a Health Care Justice Inventory
(HCJI). One version focuses on patients' interactions with their providers (HCJI-P) and the
other focuses on patients' interactions with the representatives of their health plans (HCJI-
HP). Each version of the HCJI assesses patients' appraisals of their interactions (with either
their Provider or representatives of their Health Plan) along three common dimensions of
procedural justice: Trust, Impartiality, and Participation. Both the Provider and Health Plan …
Abstract
This study describes the development of two versions of a Health Care Justice Inventory (HCJI). One version focuses on patients’ interactions with their providers (HCJI-P) and the other focuses on patients’ interactions with the representatives of their health plans (HCJI-HP). Each version of the HCJI assesses patients’ appraisals of their interactions (with either their Provider or representatives of their Health Plan) along three common dimensions of procedural justice: Trust, Impartiality, and Participation. Both the Provider and Health Plan scales assess indices that are relatively independent of patients’ demographic characteristics. In addition, patients’ appraisals of their interactions with their provider were only moderately related to their appraisals of their interactions with representatives of their health plan, indicating that the Provider and Health Plan scales tap distinct aspects of patients’ overall experience with the health care system. Overall, procedural justice dimensions were significantly related to patient satisfaction in both the Provider and the Health Plan contexts. As predicted, procedural justice factors were more strongly tied to patient satisfaction in the Provider than in the Health Plan context, and health care decisions based on distributive justice principles of Need (rather than Equity or Equality) were most closely tied to patient satisfaction in both contexts.
Springer
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