From the Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Stanford University, Redwood City, CA.
J Am Acad Orthop Surg. 2020 May 15;28(10):419-426. doi: 10.5435/JAAOS-D-19-00146.
To assess bounds of shared decision making in orthopaedic surgery, we conducted an exploratory study to examine the extent to which patients want to be involved in decision making in the management of a musculoskeletal condition.
One hundred fifteen patients at an orthopaedic surgery clinic were asked to rate preferred level of involvement in 25 common theoretical clinical decisions (passive [0], semipassive [1 to 4], equally shared involvement between patient and surgeon [5], semiactive [6 to 9], active [10]).
Patients preferred semipassive roles in 92% of decisions assessed. Patients wanted to be most involved in scheduling surgical treatments (4.75 ± 2.65) and least involved in determining incision sizes (1.13 ± 1.98). No difference exists in desired decision-making responsibility between patients who had undergone orthopaedic surgery previously and those who had not. Younger and educated patients preferred more decision-making responsibility. Those with Medicare desired more passive roles.
Despite the importance of shared decision making on delivering patient-centered care, our results suggest that patients do not prefer to share all decisions.
为了评估骨科手术中共同决策的范围,我们进行了一项探索性研究,以考察患者在管理肌肉骨骼疾病时希望在多大程度上参与决策。
在一家骨科诊所,115 名患者被要求对 25 种常见理论临床决策的参与程度进行评分(被动[0]、半被动[1 至 4]、患者和外科医生之间平等分担参与[5]、半主动[6 至 9]、主动[10])。
在评估的 92%的决策中,患者更喜欢半被动角色。患者希望在安排手术治疗方面最具参与感(4.75 ± 2.65),而在确定切口大小方面最不具参与感(1.13 ± 1.98)。之前接受过骨科手术和未接受过骨科手术的患者之间,对决策责任的期望没有差异。年轻和受过教育的患者更喜欢更多的决策责任。拥有医疗保险的患者希望扮演更被动的角色。
尽管共同决策对于提供以患者为中心的护理至关重要,但我们的研究结果表明,患者并不希望共同承担所有决策。