Patient Sex and Physician Gender as Modifiers of Low-density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Control in High-risk Patients of Atherosclerotic Disease: A Cross-sectional Study
Hiromitsu Yamashita, Nozomi Kubota, Masayoshi Shiota

TL;DR
This study finds that female patients and those with mismatched patient-physician genders are less likely to meet LDL cholesterol targets in Japan.
Contribution
The study is the first in Japan to explore interactions between patient sex and physician gender in LDL cholesterol management.
Findings
Female patients were less likely to achieve LDL cholesterol targets compared to male patients.
Male patients managed by female physicians had lower LDL target achievement than those managed by male physicians.
Abstract
Inadequate management of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol is more common in female patients than in male patients in the context of preventing atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Moreover, the effect of physician gender on patient outcomes has been acknowledged. However, to date, no study in Japan has investigated this issue or explored the potential interactions between patient sex and physician gender. This study aimed to assess disparities in achieving LDL cholesterol targets between male and female patients and examine the impact of the patient-physician gender dyad. We conducted a cross-sectional study using electronic medical records from an urban Japanese clinic. Patients aged 40-79 years with coronary artery disease, noncardiogenic stroke, or diabetes mellitus were included in the study. The modified Poisson regression model with robust error variance was used, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSex and Gender in Healthcare
