[Is patient's satisfaction with inpatient depression treatment related to their German language proficiency?]

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Erscheinungsjahr:
2009
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Text
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  • OBJECTIVE: To analyze patient satisfaction in inpatient depression treatment depending on German language proficiency. METHODS: Documentation of patients in 24 psychiatric hospitals in Baden-Württemberg (South Germany). The following three groups were matched according to age, gender, and education: native German speakers, non-native speakers with good German proficiency, and non-native speakers with limited German proficiency (67 in each group). RESULTS: The number of unsatisfied patients was four times higher in the group of non-native speakers with limited German proficiency (24 %) than in the native German speakers group (6,5 %) and more then twice as high as in the group of non-native speakers with good German proficiency (10.2 %). Patient satisfaction was lower in the group of non-native speakers with limited German proficiency independent of treatment outcome than in both other groups, whereas in both groups with good German proficiency, satisfaction was associated with treatment outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Good linguistic understanding is more important for patient satisfaction in inpatient depression treatment than treatment outcome.
  • OBJECTIVE: To analyze patient satisfaction in inpatient depression treatment depending on German language proficiency. METHODS: Documentation of patients in 24 psychiatric hospitals in Baden-Württemberg (South Germany). The following three groups were matched according to age, gender, and education: native German speakers, non-native speakers with good German proficiency, and non-native speakers with limited German proficiency (67 in each group). RESULTS: The number of unsatisfied patients was four times higher in the group of non-native speakers with limited German proficiency (24 %) than in the native German speakers group (6,5 %) and more then twice as high as in the group of non-native speakers with good German proficiency (10.2 %). Patient satisfaction was lower in the group of non-native speakers with limited German proficiency independent of treatment outcome than in both other groups, whereas in both groups with good German proficiency, satisfaction was associated with treatment outcome. CONCLUSIONS: Good linguistic understanding is more important for patient satisfaction in inpatient depression treatment than treatment outcome.
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  • info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
Quellsystem:
Forschungsinformationssystem des UKE

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oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/9ec2e10b-94a5-4b4b-af34-388e52c72553