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The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners logoLink to The Journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners
. 1985 Sep;35(278):416–418.

Attitudes of Asian patients in Birmingham to general practitioner services

Chanchal Jain, N Narayan, K Narayan, LA Pike, ME Clarkson, IG Cox, J Chatterjee
PMCID: PMC1960260  PMID: 4057173

Abstract

Attitudes of Asian patients to the delivery of primary health care in two Birmingham general practices were investigated by questionnaires administered by an Asian ethnic minorities worker who spoke dialects appropriate to the population under investigation. One practice was staffed by Asian doctors the other by British doctors. The responses to the questionnaires were analysed with reference to religion — Sikh, Hindu and Muslim and to the two practices. Choice of doctor appears to be determined more by the proximity of the patient's home to the practice premises than by ethnic considerations. Reported failures to meet the special needs of Asian patients were those inherent in the difficulties of British general practice and were not peculiar to Asian patients. The need for help from an interpreter did not seem to be 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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