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Factors related to medical students' and doctors' attitudes towards older patients: A systematic review

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-01-08, 14:13 authored by Rajvinder Samra, Tom Cox, Adam Lee Gordon, Simon Paul Conroy, Mathijs F. G. Lucassen, Amanda Griffiths
Background: studies have sought to identify the possible determinants of medical students' and doctors' attitudes towards older patients by examining relationships with a variety of factors: demographic, educational/training, exposure to older people, personality/cognitive and job/career factors. This review collates and synthesises these findings. Methods: an electronic search of 10 databases was performed (ABI/Inform, ASSIA, British Nursing Index, CINAHL, Informa Health, Medline, PsycINFO, Science Direct, Scopus, and Web of Science) through to 7 February 2017. Results: the main search identified 2,332 articles; 37 studies met the eligibility criteria set. All included studies analysed selfreported attitudes based on correlational analyses or difference testing, therefore causation could not be determined. However, self-reported positive attitudes towards older patients were related to: (i) intrinsic motivation for studying medicine, (ii) increased preference for working with older patients and (iii) good previous relationships with older people. Additionally, more positive attitudes were also reported in those with higher knowledge scores but these may relate to the use of a knowledge assessment which is an indirect measure of attitudes (i.e. Palmore's Facts on Aging Quizzes). Four out of the five high quality studies included in this review reported more positive attitudes in females compared to males. Conclusion: this article identifies factors associated with medical students' and doctors' positive attitudes towards older patients. Future research could bring greater clarity to the relationship between knowledge and attitudes by using a knowledge measure which is distinct from attitudes and also measures knowledge that is relevant to clinical care.

Funding

This research was partially supported by an Economic and Social Research Council (UK) grant to the first author (Grant Reference: ES/H014659/1).

History

Citation

Age and Ageing, 2017, 46 (6), pp. 911-919

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Age and Ageing

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP) for British Geriatrics Society

issn

0002-0729

eissn

1468-2834

Acceptance date

2017-04-06

Copyright date

2017

Available date

2018-01-08

Publisher version

https://academic.oup.com/ageing/article/46/6/911/3787763

Notes

Supplementary data mentioned in the text are available to subscribers in Age and Ageing online.

Language

en

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