Meyer Bonnie J F, Talbot Andrew P, Ranalli Carlee
Department of Educational and School Psychology and Special Education, University Park Campus, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
Psychol Aging. 2007 Sep;22(3):505-24. doi: 10.1037/0882-7974.22.3.505.
Literature relevant to medical decision making was reviewed, and a model was outlined for testing. Two studies examined whether older adults make more immediate decisions than younger adults about treatments for prostate or breast cancer in authentic scenarios. Findings clearly showed that older adults were more likely to make immediate decisions than younger adults. The research is important because it not only demonstrates the consistency of this age-related effect across disease domains, gender, ethnic groups, and prevalent education levels but begins to investigate a model to explain the effect. Major reasons for the effect focus on treatment knowledge, interest and engagement, and cognitive resources. Treatment knowledge, general cancer knowledge, interest, and cognitive resources relate to different ways of processing treatment information and preferences for immediate versus delayed decision making. Adults with high knowledge of treatments on a reliable test tended to make immediate treatment decisions, which supports the knowledge explanation. Adults with more cognitive resources and more interest tended to delay their treatment decisions. Little support was found for a cohort explanation for the relationship between age and preference for immediate medical decision making.
对与医疗决策相关的文献进行了综述,并概述了一个用于测试的模型。两项研究考察了在真实场景中,老年人在前列腺癌或乳腺癌治疗决策上是否比年轻人做出更即时的决策。研究结果清楚地表明,老年人比年轻人更有可能做出即时决策。这项研究很重要,因为它不仅证明了这种与年龄相关的效应在疾病领域、性别、种族群体和普遍教育水平上的一致性,还开始研究一个解释这种效应的模型。这种效应的主要原因集中在治疗知识、兴趣和参与度以及认知资源上。治疗知识、一般癌症知识、兴趣和认知资源与处理治疗信息的不同方式以及即时决策与延迟决策的偏好有关。在可靠测试中对治疗有高知识水平的成年人倾向于做出即时治疗决策,这支持了知识解释。认知资源更多且兴趣更高的成年人倾向于延迟他们的治疗决策。对于年龄与即时医疗决策偏好之间的关系,未发现队列解释有多少支持。