*The University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, United Kingdom; †Department of General Surgery, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Sheffield, United Kingdom; ‡Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, United Kingdom; and §Academic Unit of Gastroenterology, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Sheffield, United Kingdom.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2017 Aug;23(8):1293-1300. doi: 10.1097/MIB.0000000000001198.
Guidance from the Royal College of Surgeons advocates patient use of on-line resources to assist in decision making. Our aim was to assess the quality of on-line resources to facilitate decision making for patients considering surgery for ulcerative colitis (UC).
We undertook a systematic review based on PRISMA guidelines. This was registered on the PROSPERO database (CRD42016047177). We searched Google and repositories using several lay search terms for patient information discussing surgery for UC, published in English. Quality of content on websites was assessed using the validated DISCERN instrument and by minimum standards for decision aids (IPDASi v4.0 checklist). Decision aids were also assessed by the IPDAS checklist. Readability of written content was ascertained using the Flesch-Kincaid score.
Our searches identified 175 websites and one decision aid-119 results were excluded at initial screen and 32 were excluded at full text assessment, leaving 25 sources for review. The mean Flesch-Kincaid score for websites was 44.9 (±9.73, range 28.1-61.4), suggesting material was difficult to read. No websites compared surgery to medical management or traded off patient preferences. The median IPDAS score was 5/12 (range 1-7). The median global score based on the DISCERN rating was 1/5 (range 1-5), identifying most websites as poor quality. The decision aid scored 9/12 on the IPDAS checklist, not meeting minimum standards.
Available information for patients considering surgery for UC is generally low quality. The development of a new decision aid to support patients considering surgery for UC is recommended.
皇家外科学院的指南提倡患者使用在线资源来协助决策。我们的目的是评估在线资源的质量,以帮助考虑溃疡性结肠炎(UC)手术的患者做出决策。
我们根据 PRISMA 指南进行了系统评价。该研究已在 PROSPERO 数据库(CRD42016047177)中注册。我们使用几种通俗易懂的患者信息搜索词,在英文网站上搜索了讨论 UC 手术的在线资源。使用经过验证的 DISCERN 工具和决策辅助工具的最低标准(IPDASi v4.0 清单)评估网站内容的质量。还使用 IPDAS 清单评估了决策辅助工具。使用 Flesch-Kincaid 评分确定书面内容的可读性。
我们的搜索共确定了 175 个网站和 1 个决策辅助工具,在初始筛选中排除了 119 个结果,在全文评估中排除了 32 个结果,最后有 25 个来源可供审查。网站的平均 Flesch-Kincaid 得分为 44.9(±9.73,范围 28.1-61.4),表明材料难以阅读。没有网站将手术与药物治疗进行比较,也没有权衡患者的偏好。IPDAS 评分中位数为 5/12(范围 1-7)。基于 DISCERN 评分的中位数全球评分为 1/5(范围 1-5),表明大多数网站的质量较差。决策辅助工具在 IPDAS 清单上的得分为 9/12,未达到最低标准。
考虑 UC 手术的患者可获得的信息质量普遍较低。建议开发一种新的决策辅助工具来支持考虑 UC 手术的患者。