Härter Martin, Buchholz Angela, Nicolai Jennifer, Reuter Katrin, Komarahadi Fely, Kriston Levente, Kallinowski Birgit, Eich Wolfgang, Bieber Christiane
Department of Medical Psychology at the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics, Center for Psychosocial Medicine, University of Heidelberg, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Freiburg, Celenus-Kliniken GmbH, Offenburg, Practice for Gastroenterology & Oncology, Schwetzingen.
Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2015 Oct 2;112(40):672-9. doi: 10.3238/arztebl.2015.0672.
In shared decision making (SDM), the patient and the physician reach decisions in partnership. We conducted a trial of SDM training for physicians who treat patients with cancer.
Physicians who treat patients with cancer were invited to participate in a cluster-randomized trial and carry out SDM together with breast or colon cancer patients who faced decisions about their treatment. Decision-related physician-patient conversations were recorded. The patients filled out questionnaires immediately after the consultations (T1) and three months later (T2). The primary endpoints were the patients' confidence in and satisfaction with the decisions taken. The secondary endpoints were the process of decision making, anxiety, depression, quality of life, and externally assessed physician competence in SDM. The physicians in the intervention group underwent 12 hours of training in SDM, including the use of decision aids.
Of the 900 physicians invited to participated in the trial, 105 answered the invitation. 86 were randomly assigned to either the intervention group or the control group (44 and 42 physicians, respectively); 33 of the 86 physicians recruited at least one patient for the trial. A total of 160 patients participated in the trial, of whom 55 were treated by physicians in the intervention group. There were no intergroup differences in the primary endpoints. Trained physicians were more competent in SDM (Cohen's d = 0.56; p<0.05). Patients treated by trained physicians had lower anxiety and depression scores immediately after the consultation (d = -0.12 and -0.14, respectively; p<0.10), and markedly lower anxiety and depression scores three months later (d = -0.94 and -0.67, p<0.01).
When physicians treating cancer patients improve their competence in SDM by appropriate training, their patients may suffer less anxiety and depression. These effects merit further study.
在共同决策(SDM)中,患者和医生以合作伙伴的方式做出决策。我们对治疗癌症患者的医生进行了一项SDM培训试验。
邀请治疗癌症患者的医生参加一项整群随机试验,并与面临治疗决策的乳腺癌或结肠癌患者共同进行SDM。记录与决策相关的医患对话。患者在会诊后立即(T1)和三个月后(T2)填写问卷。主要终点是患者对所做决策的信心和满意度。次要终点是决策过程、焦虑、抑郁、生活质量以及外部评估的医生在SDM方面的能力。干预组的医生接受了12小时的SDM培训,包括使用决策辅助工具。
在邀请参加试验的900名医生中,105人回复了邀请。86人被随机分配到干预组或对照组(分别为44名和42名医生);86名医生中有33名至少招募了一名患者参加试验。共有160名患者参加了试验,其中55名由干预组的医生治疗。主要终点在组间没有差异。经过培训的医生在SDM方面更有能力(科恩d值 = 0.56;p<0.05)。由经过培训的医生治疗的患者在会诊后立即焦虑和抑郁得分较低(分别为d = -0.12和 -0.14;p<0.10),三个月后焦虑和抑郁得分显著更低(d = -0.94和 -0.67,p<0.01)。
当治疗癌症患者的医生通过适当培训提高其在SDM方面的能力时,他们的患者可能会减少焦虑和抑郁。这些效果值得进一步研究。