Krist Alex H, Woolf Steven H, Johnson Robert E, Kerns J William
Department of Family Medicine, Fairfax Family Practice Residency, Virginia Commonwealth University, Fairfax, VA 22033, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2007 Mar-Apr;5(2):112-9. doi: 10.1370/afm.623.
Many clinicians lack resources to engage patients in shared decision making for prostate cancer screening. We sought to evaluate whether previsit educational decision aids facilitate shared decision making.
This randomized controlled study compared a Web-based and a paper-based decision aid with no previsit education. Men aged 50 to 70 years undergoing a health maintenance examination at a large family practice were enrolled. The primary outcome was patient-reported level of control over the decision to be screened. Secondary outcomes included frequency of screening, patient knowledge, decisional conflict, and time spent discussing screening.
A total of 497 men participated (75 control, 196 brochure, 226 Web site). Patients exposed to either aid were no more likely than control patients to report a collaborative decision: 36% of patients in each group reported equally sharing decision responsibility. Exposure to either decision aid increased patients' involvement in decision making compared with the control condition (Web site, P = .03; brochure, P = .03). Only 46% of control patients reported an active decision-making role, compared with 56% of Web site and 54% of brochure patients. Patients exposed to a decision aid answered a greater percentage of knowledge questions correctly (54% control vs 69% Web site, P <.001, and vs 69% brochure, P <.001) and were less likely to be screened (94% control vs 86% Web site, P = .06, and vs 85% brochure, P = .04).
Patients in the decision aid groups were more informed and more engaged in the screening decision than their control counterparts. Exposure did not promote shared decision-making control, however. Whether shared decision making is the ideal model and how to measure its occurrence are subjects for further research.
许多临床医生缺乏资源让患者参与前列腺癌筛查的共同决策。我们试图评估就诊前的教育决策辅助工具是否有助于共同决策。
这项随机对照研究将基于网络和纸质的决策辅助工具与无就诊前教育进行比较。纳入了在一家大型家庭诊所接受健康维护检查的50至70岁男性。主要结局是患者报告的对筛查决策的控制水平。次要结局包括筛查频率、患者知识、决策冲突以及讨论筛查所花费的时间。
共有497名男性参与(75名对照组、196名手册组、226名网站组)。接触任何一种辅助工具的患者报告共同决策的可能性并不比对照组患者更高:每组中36%的患者报告平等分担决策责任。与对照组相比,接触任何一种决策辅助工具都增加了患者在决策中的参与度(网站组,P = .03;手册组,P = .03)。只有46%的对照组患者报告积极参与决策,而网站组为56%,手册组为54%。接触决策辅助工具的患者正确回答知识问题的百分比更高(对照组为54%,网站组为69%,P <.001;手册组为69%,P <.001),且接受筛查的可能性更低(对照组为94%,网站组为86%,P = .06;手册组为85%,P = .04)。
决策辅助工具组的患者比对照组患者在筛查决策方面了解更多且参与度更高。然而,接触决策辅助工具并未促进共同决策控制。共同决策是否是理想模式以及如何衡量其发生情况是有待进一步研究的课题。