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The Impact of Linguistic Concordance and the Active Offer of French Language Services on Patient Satisfaction

Authors :
Patrick Timony, MA, PhD (c)
Alain Gauthier, PhD
Elizabeth Wenghofer, PhD
Amelie Hien, PhD
Source :
Diversity of Research in Health Journal, Vol 5, Iss 2 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Laurentian University Library & Archives, 2022.

Abstract

Communication is essential to providing quality primary care. Linguistic concordance between patients and physicians has been linked to improved health outcomes and greater patient satisfaction. Although Canadian Francophones often struggle to access linguistics concordant health services, the concept of the active offer of French Language Services (FLS) has emerged as a means of ensuring the availability of such services and improving the francophone patient experience. However, the impact of language concordance and the active offer of FLS on patient satisfaction among Ontario Francophones remain largely unknown. Patient satisfaction surveys were collected as part of a continuing education program targeted at family physicians in Northeastern Ontario. Participating physicians distributed patient surveys consisting of select patient satisfaction questions from the Physicians Achievement Review (PAR) and select questions from the Active Offer of French Language Services in Minority Context Measure. Valid surveys were received from 235 patients. Just under half of these (44%) identified as Francophones, 62.6% had a French-speaking family physician; however, only 17.2% reported regularly speaking in French with their family physician. As hypothesized, there was a consistent tendency for Francophones who experience stronger linguistic concordance with their family physician to report higher satisfaction scores. Francophones who regularly speak French with their family physicians were more satisfied ( = 4.63) than those who rarely/never speak French ( = 4.29, F(1; 83) = 4.852; p < 0.05). There was also a statistically significant interaction between the patients' language of preference and the service language. Francophones who prefer French and regularly speak it with their family physician (linguistic concordance; adj= 4.82) were significantly more satisfied than those who prefer French yet rarely/never speak it (linguistic discordance; adj= 4.06, F(1; 75) = 11.950; p < 0.001). Furthermore, a positive correlation between patient satisfaction and the active offer was observed in Francophones (r = 0.49, p

Details

Language :
English, French
ISSN :
25611666
Volume :
5
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Diversity of Research in Health Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5f7c02859647cdbae806fa244105ea
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.28984/drhj.v5i2.359