Taylor Lauren J, Nabozny Michael J, Steffens Nicole M, Tucholka Jennifer L, Brasel Karen J, Johnson Sara K, Zelenski Amy, Rathouz Paul J, Zhao Qianqian, Kwekkeboom Kristine L, Campbell Toby C, Schwarze Margaret L
Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Denver Public Health, Denver Health and Hospital Authority, Denver, Colorado.
JAMA Surg. 2017 Jun 1;152(6):531-538. doi: 10.1001/jamasurg.2016.5674.
Although many older adults prefer to avoid burdensome interventions with limited ability to preserve their functional status, aggressive treatments, including surgery, are common near the end of life. Shared decision making is critical to achieve value-concordant treatment decisions and minimize unwanted care. However, communication in the acute inpatient setting is challenging.
To evaluate the proof of concept of an intervention to teach surgeons to use the Best Case/Worst Case framework as a strategy to change surgeon communication and promote shared decision making during high-stakes surgical decisions.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Our prospective pre-post study was conducted from June 2014 to August 2015, and data were analyzed using a mixed methods approach. The data were drawn from decision-making conversations between 32 older inpatients with an acute nonemergent surgical problem, 30 family members, and 25 surgeons at 1 tertiary care hospital in Madison, Wisconsin.
A 2-hour training session to teach each study-enrolled surgeon to use the Best Case/Worst Case communication framework.
We scored conversation transcripts using OPTION 5, an observer measure of shared decision making, and used qualitative content analysis to characterize patterns in conversation structure, description of outcomes, and deliberation over treatment alternatives.
The study participants were patients aged 68 to 95 years (n = 32), 44% of whom had 5 or more comorbid conditions; family members of patients (n = 30); and surgeons (n = 17). The median OPTION 5 score improved from 41 preintervention (interquartile range, 26-66) to 74 after Best Case/Worst Case training (interquartile range, 60-81). Before training, surgeons described the patient's problem in conjunction with an operative solution, directed deliberation over options, listed discrete procedural risks, and did not integrate preferences into a treatment recommendation. After training, surgeons using Best Case/Worst Case clearly presented a choice between treatments, described a range of postoperative trajectories including functional decline, and involved patients and families in deliberation.
Using the Best Case/Worst Case framework changed surgeon communication by shifting the focus of decision-making conversations from an isolated surgical problem to a discussion about treatment alternatives and outcomes. This intervention can help surgeons structure challenging conversations to promote shared decision making in the acute setting.
尽管许多老年人倾向于避免那些在维持其功能状态方面能力有限的繁重干预措施,但包括手术在内的积极治疗在生命末期却很常见。共同决策对于达成符合价值观的治疗决策并尽量减少不必要的护理至关重要。然而,在急性住院环境中的沟通具有挑战性。
评估一项干预措施的概念验证,该干预措施旨在教导外科医生使用最佳情况/最差情况框架,作为一种在高风险手术决策中改变外科医生沟通方式并促进共同决策的策略。
设计、设置和参与者:我们的前瞻性前后对照研究于2014年6月至2015年8月进行,数据采用混合方法进行分析。数据来自威斯康星州麦迪逊市一家三级医疗医院的32名患有急性非紧急外科问题的老年住院患者、30名家庭成员和25名外科医生之间的决策对话。
为每位参与研究的外科医生提供一次为时2小时的培训课程,教导其使用最佳情况/最差情况沟通框架。
我们使用OPTION 5对对话记录进行评分,OPTION 5是一种对共同决策的观察性测量方法,并使用定性内容分析来描述对话结构、结局描述以及对治疗方案的审议模式。
研究参与者包括68至95岁的患者(n = 32),其中44%患有5种或更多的合并症;患者的家庭成员(n = 30);以及外科医生(n = 17)。OPTION 5评分中位数从干预前的41分(四分位间距,26 - 66)提高到最佳情况/最差情况培训后的74分(四分位间距,60 - 81)。培训前,外科医生结合手术解决方案描述患者的问题,主导对各种选择的审议,列出离散的手术风险,并且没有将患者偏好纳入治疗建议中。培训后,使用最佳情况/最差情况框架的外科医生清楚地呈现了治疗方案之间的选择,描述了一系列包括功能衰退在内的术后病程,并让患者及其家属参与审议。
使用最佳情况/最差情况框架改变了外科医生的沟通方式,将决策对话的重点从孤立的外科问题转移到关于治疗方案和结局的讨论上。这种干预措施有助于外科医生构建具有挑战性的对话,以促进在急性环境中的共同决策。