Cancer Prevention Fellow, Cancer Prevention Fellowship Program, Center for Cancer Training, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MDBehavioral Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MDClinician Investigator, Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation, Maine Medical Center, Portland, MEProgram Director, Basic Biobehavioral and Psychological Sciences Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MDDirector, Behavioral Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD andChief, Outcomes Research Branch, Applied Research Program, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Health Expect. 2013 Dec;16(4):362-72. doi: 10.1111/j.1369-7625.2011.00717.x. Epub 2011 Aug 12.
Medical interventions are often characterized by substantial scientific uncertainty regarding their benefits and harms. Physicians must communicate to their patients as part of the process of shared decision making, yet they may not always communicate scientific uncertainty for several reasons. One suggested by past research is individual differences in physicians' tolerance of uncertainty. Relatedly, an unexplored explanation is physicians' beliefs about their patients' tolerance of uncertainty.
To test this possibility, we surveyed a sample of primary care physicians (N = 1500) and examined the association between their attitudes about communicating and managing scientific uncertainty and their perceptions of negative reactions to uncertainty by their patients. Physician perceptions were measured by their propensity towards pessimistic appraisals of risk information and avoidance of decision making when risk information is ambiguous--of uncertain reliability, credibility or adequacy, known as 'ambiguity aversion'.
Confirming past studies, physician demographics (e.g. medical specialty) predicted attitudes toward communicating scientific uncertainty. Additionally, physicians' beliefs about their patients' ambiguity aversion significantly predicted these preferences. Physicians who thought that more of their patients would have negative reactions to ambiguous information were more likely to think that they should decide what is best for their patients (β = 0.065, P = 0.013), and to withhold an intervention that had uncertainty associated with it (β = 0.170, P < 0.001).
When faced with the task of communicating scientific uncertainty about medical tests and treatments, physicians' perceptions of their patients' ambiguity aversion may be related to their attitudes towards communicating uncertainty.
医学干预措施通常具有很大的益处和危害方面的科学不确定性。医生必须与患者沟通,这是共同决策过程的一部分,但出于多种原因,他们可能并不总是传达科学不确定性。过去的研究提出的一个原因是医生对不确定性的容忍度存在个体差异。相关地,一个未被探索的解释是医生对患者对不确定性容忍度的看法。
为了检验这种可能性,我们对一组初级保健医生(N=1500)进行了调查,并考察了他们对沟通和管理科学不确定性的态度与他们对患者对不确定性的负面反应的看法之间的关系。医生的看法通过他们对风险信息的悲观评估倾向和在风险信息不确定可靠、可信或充分时避免决策的倾向来衡量,这被称为“回避不确定性”。
证实了过去的研究,医生的人口统计学特征(例如医学专业)预测了他们对沟通科学不确定性的态度。此外,医生对患者回避不确定性的看法显著预测了这些偏好。认为更多患者对模棱两可的信息会有负面反应的医生更有可能认为他们应该为患者做出最佳决策(β=0.065,P=0.013),并回避与不确定性相关的干预措施(β=0.170,P<0.001)。
当面临传达与医学测试和治疗相关的科学不确定性的任务时,医生对患者回避不确定性的看法可能与他们沟通不确定性的态度有关。