The University of Chicago, 5841 S Maryland Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
J Med Ethics. 2012 Feb;38(2):77-82. doi: 10.1136/jme.2010.040618. Epub 2011 Jun 22.
Although medical ethicists and educators emphasise patient-centred decision-making, previous studies suggest that patients often prefer their doctors to make the clinical decisions.
To examine the associations between a preference for physician-directed decision-making and patient health status and sociodemographic characteristics.
Sociodemographic and clinical information from all consenting general internal medicine patients at the University of Chicago Medical Center were examined. The primary objectives were to (1) assess the extent to which patients prefer an active role in clinical decision-making, and (2) determine whether religious service attendance, the importance of religion, self-rated spirituality, Charlson Comorbidity Index, self-reported health, Vulnerable Elder Score and several demographic characteristics were associated with these preferences.
Data were collected from 8308 of 11,620 possible participants. Ninety-seven per cent of respondents wanted doctors to offer them choices and to consider their opinions. However, two out of three (67%) preferred to leave medical decisions to the doctor. In multiple regression analyses, preferring to leave decisions to the doctor was associated with older age (per year, OR=1.019, 95% CI 1.003 to 1.036) and frequently attending religious services (OR=1.5, 95% CI 1.1 to 2.1, compared with never), and it was inversely associated with female sex (OR=0.6, 95% CI 0.5 to 0.8), university education (OR=0.6, 95% CI 0.4 to 0.9, compared with no high school diploma) and poor health (OR=0.6, 95% CI 0.3 to 0.9).
Almost all patients want doctors to offer them choices and to consider their opinions, but most prefer to leave medical decisions to the doctor. Patients who are male, less educated, more religious and healthier are more likely to want to leave decisions to their doctors, but effects are small.
尽管医学伦理学家和教育工作者强调以患者为中心的决策,但先前的研究表明,患者通常更希望医生做出临床决策。
探讨患者对医生主导型决策的偏好与患者健康状况和社会人口学特征之间的关联。
研究人员对芝加哥大学医疗中心所有同意参与的普通内科患者的社会人口学和临床信息进行了检查。主要目的是(1)评估患者在临床决策中积极参与的程度,以及(2)确定宗教服务参与度、宗教重要性、自我评定的灵性、Charlson 合并症指数、自我报告的健康状况、脆弱老年人评分以及多项人口统计学特征是否与这些偏好相关。
从 11620 名可能的参与者中收集了 8308 名参与者的数据。97%的受访者希望医生为他们提供选择并考虑他们的意见。然而,三分之二(67%)的患者更愿意将医疗决策留给医生。在多变量回归分析中,更倾向于将决策留给医生与年龄较大(每年,OR=1.019,95%CI 1.003 至 1.036)和经常参加宗教服务(OR=1.5,95%CI 1.1 至 2.1,与从不参加相比)有关,与女性(OR=0.6,95%CI 0.5 至 0.8)、大学教育(OR=0.6,95%CI 0.4 至 0.9,与无高中学历相比)和较差的健康状况(OR=0.6,95%CI 0.3 至 0.9)呈负相关。
几乎所有患者都希望医生为他们提供选择并考虑他们的意见,但大多数患者更愿意将医疗决策留给医生。男性、受教育程度较低、宗教信仰更虔诚、健康状况较差的患者更倾向于将决策留给医生,但影响较小。