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Articles

International variations in fiduciary and competence trust of physicians: A multilevel study

Pages 23-45 | Received 23 Sep 2018, Accepted 18 Oct 2019, Published online: 06 Nov 2019
 

ABSTRACT

This article examines how public trust in physicians varies across two primary dimensions: trust in physicians' technical competence and in their fiduciary duty to prioritise patients' interests above their own. While prior empirical studies explain variations in trust of physicians primarily by focusing on patients' individual characteristics, trust differences across national borders remain underexplored. This study utilises nationally representative survey data from 26 countries and data from national-level collections to investigate the correlates of both dimensions of trust. Multilevel ordinal logistic regression analysis reveals associations between the two dimensions of trust in physicians and a host of individual and national characteristics. The study reveals a complex relationship between trust and how countries fund health care delivery. Trust that physicians uphold their fiduciary duty to patients is significantly stronger in countries with predominantly tax-funded primary care systems. Conversely, both fiduciary trust and competence trust are weaker where out-of-pocket payments comprise a greater percentage of total health spending. Finally, individuals who report they are in better health are more likely to trust physicians.

ACTION EDITOR:

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Prof. Robert R. Martin is an Associate Professor of Sociology at Southeastern Louisiana University. In addition to his research on trust from a sociological perspective, he has published on the sociology of religion and religious freedom issues using quantitative analytical techniques.

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