Graham Ian D, Logan Jo, Bennett Carol L, Presseau Justin, O'Connor Annette M, Mitchell Susan L, Tetroe Jacqueline M, Cranney Ann, Hebert Paul, Aaron Shawn D
Ottawa Health Research Institute, Clinical Epidemiology Program, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2007 Jul 6;7:20. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-7-20.
Decision aids are evidence based tools that assist patients in making informed values-based choices and supplement the patient-clinician interaction. While there is evidence to show that decision aids improve key indicators of patients' decision quality, relatively little is known about physicians' acceptance of decision aids or factors that influence their decision to use them. The purpose of this study was to describe physicians' perceptions of three decision aids, their expressed intent to use them, and their subsequent use of them.
We conducted a cross-sectional survey of random samples of Canadian respirologists, family physicians, and geriatricians. Three decision aids representing a range of health decisions were evaluated. The survey elicited physicians' opinions on the characteristics of the decision aid and their willingness to use it. Physicians who indicated a strong likelihood of using the decision aid were contacted three months later regarding their actual use of the decision aid.
Of the 580 eligible physicians, 47% (n = 270) returned completed questionnaires. More than 85% of the respondents felt the decision aid was well developed and that it presented the essential information for decision making in an understandable, balanced, and unbiased manner. A majority of respondents (>80%) also felt that the decision aid would guide patients in a logical way, preparing them to participate in decision making and to reach a decision. Fewer physicians (<60%) felt the decision aid would improve the quality of patient visits or be easily implemented into practice and very few (27%) felt that the decision aid would save time. Physicians' intentions to use the decision aid were related to their comfort with offering it to patients, the decision aid topic, and the perceived ease of implementing it into practice. While 54% of the surveyed physicians indicated they would use the decision aid, less than a third followed through with this intention.
Despite strong support for the format, content, and quality of patient decision aids, and physicians' stated intentions to adopt them into clinical practice, most did not use them within three months of completing the survey. There is a wide gap between intention and behaviour. Further research is required to study the determinants of this intention-behaviour gap and to develop interventions aimed at barriers to physicians' use of decision aids.
决策辅助工具是基于证据的工具,可帮助患者做出基于价值观的明智选择,并补充患者与临床医生之间的互动。虽然有证据表明决策辅助工具可改善患者决策质量的关键指标,但对于医生对决策辅助工具的接受程度或影响其使用决策辅助工具的因素了解相对较少。本研究的目的是描述医生对三种决策辅助工具的看法、他们使用这些工具的明确意图以及随后对这些工具的使用情况。
我们对加拿大呼吸科医生、家庭医生和老年病医生的随机样本进行了横断面调查。评估了三种代表一系列健康决策的决策辅助工具。该调查征求了医生对决策辅助工具特征的意见以及他们使用该工具的意愿。三个月后,联系了表示很有可能使用决策辅助工具的医生,询问他们对决策辅助工具的实际使用情况。
在580名符合条件的医生中,47%(n = 270)返回了完整的问卷。超过85%的受访者认为决策辅助工具开发良好,并且以易懂、平衡和无偏见的方式呈现了决策所需的基本信息。大多数受访者(>80%)还认为决策辅助工具将以合乎逻辑的方式指导患者,使他们做好参与决策并做出决定的准备。较少的医生(<60%)认为决策辅助工具会提高患者就诊的质量或易于在实践中实施,很少有医生(27%)认为决策辅助工具会节省时间。医生使用决策辅助工具的意图与他们向患者提供该工具时的舒适度、决策辅助工具的主题以及将其应用于实践的难易程度有关。虽然54%的受访医生表示他们会使用决策辅助工具,但不到三分之一的人贯彻了这一意图。
尽管患者决策辅助工具的形式、内容和质量得到了大力支持,并且医生表示有意将其应用于临床实践,但大多数医生在完成调查后的三个月内并未使用。意图与行为之间存在很大差距。需要进一步研究以探讨这种意图 - 行为差距的决定因素,并制定针对医生使用决策辅助工具障碍的干预措施。