Zikmund-Fisher Brian J, Sarr Brianna, Fagerlin Angela, Ubel Peter A
VA Health Services Research & Development Center for Practice Management and Outcomes Research, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Jun;21(6):618-22. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00410.x.
Many people display omission bias in medical decision making, accepting the risk of passive nonintervention rather than actively choosing interventions (such as vaccinations) that result in lower levels of risk.
Testing whether people's preferences for active interventions would increase when deciding for others versus for themselves.
Survey participants imagined themselves in 1 of 4 roles: patient, physician treating a single patient, medical director creating treatment guidelines, or parent deciding for a child. All read 2 short scenarios about vaccinations for a deadly flu and treatments for a slow-growing cancer.
Two thousand three hundred and ninety-nine people drawn from a demographically stratified internet sample.
Chosen or recommended treatments. We also measured participants' emotional response to our task.
Preferences for risk-reducing active treatments were significantly stronger for participants imagining themselves as medical professionals than for those imagining themselves as patients (vaccination: 73% [physician] & 63% [medical director] vs 48% [patient], Ps<.001; chemotherapy: 68% & 68% vs 60%, Ps<.012). Similar results were observed for the parental role (vaccination: 57% vs 48%, P=.003; chemotherapy: 72% vs 60%, P<.001). Reported emotional reactions were stronger in the responsible medical professional and parental roles yet were also independently associated with treatment choice, with higher scores associated with reduced omission tendencies (OR=1.15 for both regressions, Ps<.01).
Treatment preferences may be substantially influenced by a decision-making role. As certain roles appear to reinforce "big picture" thinking about difficult risk tradeoffs, physicians and patients should consider re-framing treatment decisions to gain new, and hopefully beneficial, perspectives.
许多人在医疗决策中表现出遗漏偏差,宁愿接受被动不干预的风险,也不愿主动选择风险更低的干预措施(如接种疫苗)。
测试人们在为他人而非为自己做决策时,对主动干预措施的偏好是否会增加。
调查参与者想象自己处于以下四种角色之一:患者、治疗单个患者的医生、制定治疗指南的医学主任或为孩子做决策的家长。所有人都阅读了两篇关于致命流感疫苗接种和缓慢生长癌症治疗的简短案例。
从人口统计学分层的互联网样本中抽取的2399人。
选择或推荐的治疗方法。我们还测量了参与者对我们任务的情绪反应。
想象自己为医学专业人员的参与者对降低风险的主动治疗方法的偏好,明显强于想象自己为患者的参与者(疫苗接种:73%[医生]和63%[医学主任]对48%[患者],P<0.001;化疗:68%和68%对60%,P<0.012)。在家长角色中也观察到类似结果(疫苗接种:57%对48%,P = 0.003;化疗:72%对60%,P<0.001)。在负责任的医学专业人员和家长角色中,报告的情绪反应更强,但也与治疗选择独立相关,得分越高,遗漏倾向越低(两个回归的OR均为1.15,P<0.01)。
治疗偏好可能会受到决策角色的重大影响。由于某些角色似乎会强化对艰难风险权衡的“大局观”思考,医生和患者应该考虑重新构建治疗决策,以获得新的、有望有益的观点。