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. 1991 Aug;41(349):330–331.

Patients' choice of general practitioner: importance of patients' and doctors' sex and ethnicity.

W I Ahmad 1, E E Kernohan 1, M R Baker 1
PMCID: PMC1371756  PMID: 1777278

Abstract

The relative importance of sex and ethnicity in patients' choice of doctor is not known. A total of 1633 consultations at a health centre in Bradford, with a mixed ethnic list, were examined over a four week period to test the relative importance of these variables. Patients had the choice to consult any one of: a male Asian, a male white or a female white doctor. Asian patients, irrespective of sex, were significantly (P less than 0.001) more likely to consult the Asian doctor then either of the other two doctors, though a greater proportion of Asian women than men consulted the female white doctor. Although the sex of the doctor was important in patients' choice, for Asian patients the doctor's culture and language were more important.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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