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Open AccessJournal Article

Putting on the style: what patients think of the way their doctor dresses.

Brian McKinstry, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1991 - 
- Vol. 41, Iss: 348, pp 270-278
TLDR
Overall, patients seemed to favour a more formal approach to dress, with the male doctor wearing a formal suit and tie and the female doctor in a white coat scoring the most high marks.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine how acceptable patients found different styles of doctors' dress and whether patients felt that a doctor's style of dress influenced their respect for his or her opinion. A total of 475 patients from five general practices in Lothian were surveyed using photographs of different styles in a male and female doctor and questions about their attitudes to doctors' dress in general. Overall, patients seemed to favour a more formal approach to dress, with the male doctor wearing a formal suit and tie and the female doctor in a white coat scoring the most high marks. This was particularly true of older patients and those in social classes 1 and 2. The male doctor wearing a tweed jacket and informal shirt and tie scored fewer low marks and this was therefore the least disliked of the outfits. There was a marked variation between preferences of patients registered with different practices. When asked, 28% of patients said they would be unhappy about consulting one of doctors shown, usually the ones who were informally dressed. However, some patients said they would dislike their doctor wearing a white coat. Although there are more important attributes for a general practitioner than the way he or she dresses, a majority of patients (64%) thought that the way their doctor dressed was very important or quite important. Given that 41% of the patients said they would have more confidence in the ability of one of the doctors based on their appearance it would seem logical for doctors to dress in a way that inspires confidence.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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What to wear today? Effect of doctor's attire on the trust and confidence of patients.

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Judging a book by its cover: descriptive survey of patients' preferences for doctors' appearance and mode of address

TL;DR: Patients prefer doctors to wear semiformal dress and are most comfortable with conservative items; many less conservative items were, however, acceptable to most patients.
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Factors affecting patients' trust and confidence in GPs: evidence from the English national GP patient survey.

TL;DR: Investigating patients’ reported confidence and trust in the GP, analysing ratings of 7 interpersonal aspects of the consultation, found that the sense of ‘being taken seriously’ had the strongest association withconfidence and trust.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Physician conduct and other factors that affect consumer satisfaction with medical care

TL;DR: Physician conduct was clearly the most important factor in relation to general satisfaction with care for the total sample and for all groups studied, suggesting that more than one interpretation of general satisfaction scores should be considered when consumer satisfaction surveys are used to support the planning of educational programs in medicine and the delivery of services.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patients' and physicians' attitudes regarding the physician's professional appearance.

TL;DR: Overall, patients were less discriminating in their attitude toward physician appearance than physicians, and patients rated traditional items less positively and casual items less negatively.
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Attitudes of patients and physicians regarding physician dress and demeanor in the emergency department.

TL;DR: Patients and physicians believed emergency physicians should wear white coats, but only 18% disliked scrub suits, and patients were more tolerant of casual dress than were physicians.
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Clinical etiquette: a critical primer.

TL;DR: A brief account of etiquette dealing with the manner and style in which the physician should interact with the patient is offered.
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