VA Health Services Research & Development Center for Clinical Management Research, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
Med Decis Making. 2010 Sep-Oct;30(5 Suppl):85S-95S. doi: 10.1177/0272989X10380466.
Although many researchers have examined patient involvement and patient-provider interactions within specific clinical environments, no nationally representative data exist to characterize patient perceptions of decision making and patient-provider communications across multiple common medical decisions.
To identify deficits and variations in the patient experience of making common medical decisions about initiation of prescription medications for hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, or depression; screening tests for colorectal, breast, or prostate cancer; and surgeries for knee or hip replacement, cataracts, or lower back pain, as well as to identify factors associated with patient confidence in the decisions.
National sample of US adults identified by random-digit dialing.
Cross-sectional survey conducted from November 2006 to May 2007.
Included 2473 English-speaking adults age 40 and older who reported undertaking 1 or more of the above 9 medical actions or discussing doing so with a health care provider within the past 2 years.
Patients reported who initiated discussions and made the final decisions, how much discussion of pros and cons occurred, whether they were asked about their preferences, and their confidence that the decision "was the right one."
The proportion of patient-driven decisions varied significantly across decisions (range: blood pressure: 16% to knee/hip replacement: 48%). Most patients (78%-85%) reported that providers made a recommendation, and such recommendations generally favored taking medical action. Fewer patients reported that providers asked them about their preferences (range: colon cancer screening: 34% to knee/hip replacement: 80%) or discussed reasons not to take action (range: breast cancer screening: 20% to lower back surgery: 80%). Decision confidence was higher among patients who reported primarily making the decision themselves (odds ratio [OR] = 14.6, P < 0.001) or having been asked for their preference (OR = 1.32, P < 0.01) and was lower among patients whose patient-provider discussions included cons (OR = 0.74, P = 0.008).
Recall biases may affect patients' memories of their decision-making processes.
DECISIONS participants reported wide variations in the proportion of discussions that included a conversation about reasons not to take action or a conversation about patients' preferences about what they would like to do. These factors appear directly related to patients' confidence that the decision was "right."
尽管许多研究人员已经在特定临床环境中研究了患者参与和医患互动,但目前尚无全国代表性数据来描述患者对多种常见医疗决策中决策制定和医患沟通的看法。
确定在启动高血压、高胆固醇或抑郁症的处方药物、结直肠癌、乳腺癌或前列腺癌筛查试验以及膝关节或髋关节置换术、白内障或下腰痛手术等常见医疗决策中,患者体验的缺陷和差异,并确定与患者对决策的信心相关的因素。
通过随机数字拨号确定的美国成年人的全国样本。
2006 年 11 月至 2007 年 5 月进行的横断面调查。
包括 2473 名年龄在 40 岁及以上、报告在过去 2 年内进行了上述 9 项医疗行为中的 1 项或多项或与医疗保健提供者讨论过此类行为的讲英语的成年人。
报告谁发起了讨论并做出了最终决定,进行了多少利弊讨论,是否询问了他们的偏好,以及他们对决定“是否正确”的信心。
在不同决策中,患者驱动决策的比例差异显著(范围:血压:16%至膝关节/髋关节置换术:48%)。大多数患者(78%-85%)报告称,医生提出了建议,这些建议通常倾向于采取医疗行动。较少的患者报告称医生询问了他们的偏好(结肠癌筛查:34%至膝关节/髋关节置换术:80%)或讨论了不采取行动的原因(乳腺癌筛查:20%至下腰痛手术:80%)。报告主要自己做出决策(比值比[OR] = 14.6,P <0.001)或被询问偏好的患者(OR = 1.32,P <0.01)的决策信心更高,而患者-提供者讨论中包含弊端的患者(OR = 0.74,P = 0.008)的决策信心较低。
回忆偏倚可能会影响患者对决策过程的记忆。
在参与者报告的讨论比例中,讨论不采取行动的原因或讨论患者对他们想要做的事情的偏好的比例存在很大差异。这些因素似乎与患者对决策“正确”的信心直接相关。