Gendered Uncertainty and Variation in Physicians’ Decisions for Coronary Heart Disease

Author:

Welch Lisa C.1,Lutfey Karen E.1,Gerstenberger Eric1,Grace Matthew1

Affiliation:

1. New England Research Institutes, Watertown, MA, USA

Abstract

Nonmedical factors and diagnostic certainty contribute to variation in clinical decision making, but the process by which this occurs remains unclear. We examine how physicians’ interpretations of patient sex-gender affect diagnostic certainty and, in turn, decision making for coronary heart disease. Data are from a factorial experiment of 256 physicians who viewed 1 of 16 video vignettes with different patient-actors presenting the same symptoms of coronary heart disease. Physician participants completed a structured interview and provided a narrative about their decision-making processes. Quantitative analysis showed that diagnostic uncertainty reduces the likelihood that physicians will order tests and medications appropriate for an urgent cardiac condition in particular. Qualitative analysis revealed that a subset of physicians applied knowledge that women have “atypical symptoms” as a generalization, which engendered uncertainty for some. Findings are discussed in relation to social-psychological processes that underlie clinical decision making and the social framing of medical knowledge.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Social Psychology

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