1Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts 2Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2017 Aug 2;99(15):1253-1260. doi: 10.2106/JBJS.16.01045.
Patient decision aids are effective in randomized controlled trials, yet little is known about their impact in routine care. The purpose of this study was to examine whether decision aids increase shared decision-making when used in routine care.
A prospective study was designed to evaluate the impact of a quality improvement project to increase the use of decision aids for patients with hip or knee osteoarthritis, lumbar disc herniation, or lumbar spinal stenosis. A usual care cohort was enrolled before the quality improvement project and an intervention cohort was enrolled after the project. Participants were surveyed 1 week after a specialist visit, and surgical status was collected at 6 months. Regression analyses adjusted for clustering of patients within clinicians and examined the impact on knowledge, patient reports of shared decision-making in the visit, and surgical rates. With 550 surveys, the study had 80% to 90% power to detect a difference in these key outcomes.
The response rates to the 1-week survey were 70.6% (324 of 459) for the usual care cohort and 70.2% (328 of 467) for the intervention cohort. There was no significant difference (p > 0.05) in any patient characteristic between the 2 cohorts. More patients received decision aids in the intervention cohort at 63.6% compared with the usual care cohort at 27.3% (p = 0.007). Decision aid use was associated with higher knowledge scores, with a mean difference of 18.7 points (95% confidence interval [CI], 11.4 to 26.1 points; p < 0.001) for the usual care cohort and 15.3 points (95% CI, 7.5 to 23.0 points; p = 0.002) for the intervention cohort. Patients reported more shared decision-making (p = 0.009) in the visit with their surgeon in the intervention cohort, with a mean Shared Decision-Making Process score (and standard deviation) of 66.9 ± 27.5 points, compared with the usual care cohort at 62.5 ± 28.6 points. The majority of patients received their preferred treatment, and this did not differ by cohort or decision aid use. Surgical rates were lower in the intervention cohort for those who received the decision aids at 42.3% compared with 58.8% for those who did not receive decision aids (p = 0.023) and in the usual care cohort at 44.3% for those who received decision aids compared with 55.7% for those who did not receive them (p = 0.45).
The quality improvement project successfully integrated patient decision aids into a busy orthopaedic clinic. When used in routine care, decision aids are associated with increased knowledge, more shared decision-making, and lower surgical rates.
There is increasing pressure to design systems of care that inform and involve patients in decisions about elective surgery. In this study, the authors found that patient decision aids, when used as part of routine orthopaedic care, were associated with increased knowledge, more shared decision-making, higher patient experience ratings, and lower surgical rates.
患者决策辅助工具在随机对照试验中是有效的,但在常规护理中它们的影响知之甚少。本研究的目的是检验在常规护理中使用决策辅助工具是否能增加共同决策。
设计了一项前瞻性研究,以评估一项质量改进项目对增加髋关节或膝关节骨关节炎、腰椎间盘突出症或腰椎椎管狭窄症患者使用决策辅助工具的影响。在质量改进项目之前纳入了常规护理队列,在项目之后纳入了干预队列。参与者在专家就诊后 1 周接受调查,并在 6 个月时收集手术情况。回归分析调整了患者在医生中的聚类,并检验了对知识、就诊中患者共同决策报告的影响以及手术率。在进行了 550 次调查后,该研究有 80%至 90%的效力来检测这些关键结果的差异。
常规护理队列的 1 周调查回复率为 70.6%(324/459),干预队列的回复率为 70.2%(328/467)。两个队列之间在任何患者特征上都没有显著差异(p>0.05)。干预队列中,63.6%的患者接受了决策辅助工具,而常规护理队列中只有 27.3%(p=0.007)。决策辅助工具的使用与更高的知识得分相关,常规护理队列的平均差值为 18.7 分(95%置信区间[CI],11.4 至 26.1 分;p<0.001),干预队列的平均差值为 15.3 分(95% CI,7.5 至 23.0 分;p=0.002)。干预队列中的患者报告在就诊时与外科医生进行了更多的共同决策(p=0.009),其外科医生共同决策过程的平均得分(和标准差)为 66.9±27.5 分,而常规护理队列为 62.5±28.6 分。大多数患者接受了他们首选的治疗方法,且这不受队列或决策辅助工具使用的影响。在干预队列中,接受决策辅助工具的患者手术率为 42.3%,而未接受决策辅助工具的患者手术率为 58.8%(p=0.023);在常规护理队列中,接受决策辅助工具的患者手术率为 44.3%,而未接受决策辅助工具的患者手术率为 55.7%(p=0.45)。
质量改进项目成功地将患者决策辅助工具融入了繁忙的骨科诊所。在常规护理中使用时,决策辅助工具与增加知识、更多的共同决策以及较低的手术率相关。
越来越需要设计能够告知和让患者参与择期手术决策的护理系统。在这项研究中,作者发现,在常规骨科护理中使用患者决策辅助工具与增加知识、更多的共同决策、更高的患者体验评分和更低的手术率有关。