• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to footer
CHW Central

CHW Central

A global resource for and about Community Health Workers

DONATE
  • Home
  • About
    • About CHW Central
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ
    • Meet Our Interns
    • Partners
    • TAG Members
  • Features
  • CHW Voices
    • Blogs
    • Photo Essays
    • Podcasts
    • Videos
  • CHF Hub
    • Country Resources
    • Country Voices
    • Courses & Partner Resources
    • Financing Resources
  • Learning Hub
  • Resources
    • All Resources
    • Training Resources

Providing health care to low-income women: a matter of trust.

by

Authors: Sheppard VB, Zambrana RE, O'Malley AS.

Trust is an important indicator of quality in patient-provider relationships and predicts adherence to certain protective health behaviours. It has been relatively unexplored among low-income or minority women. We explored health care experiences that influence patient trust among low-income women in the USA with respect to professionals and lay health workers (LHWs). Factors related to greater trust specific to patient-provider relationships were: continuity of the patient-provider relationship, effective communication, demonstration of caring and perceived competence. Women with less trust in their physicians reported an unwillingness to follow his/her advice. Most women reported having more trusting relationships with LHWs and nurses than with physicians, probably due to greater contact with these staff. Prenatal care presents a unique opportunity for providers to contribute to the elimination of health disparities among low-income women. Improving continuity with public health prenatal care providers and building strong relationships with LHWs may enhance quality of care and contribute to achieving this goal. Better patient-provider communication is also a practical area of focus towards improving patient trust.

Related

Download Resource

Resource Topic: CHW Role, Community Health Workers/Volunteers, Human Resources Management/Workforce Development, Minority Population

Resource Type: Case studies, Journal articles

Year: 2004

Region:

Country: United States of America

Publisher May Restrict Access: No

Related

Footer

Important Site Links

About Us
Contact us
FAQ
Technical Advisory Group (TAG)
Partners

Social Media

  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter

Translate Site

CHW Central is a 501(c)3 educational non-profit organization.

Copyright © 2026 Initiatives Inc. · Contact Us · Log in
Digital Marketing by Bricks & Clicks Marketing