Melzer Anne C, Golden Sara E, Ono Sarah S, Datta Santanu, Crothers Kristina, Slatore Christopher G
Center for Care Delivery and Outcomes Research, Minneapolis VA Healthcare System, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care, Department of Medicine, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2020 Feb;35(2):546-553. doi: 10.1007/s11606-019-05516-3. Epub 2019 Nov 19.
Shared decision-making (SDM) is widely recommended and required by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid for patients considering lung cancer screening (LCS).
We examined clinicians' communication practices and perceived barriers of SDM for LCS at three medical centers with established screening programs.
Multicenter qualitative study of clinicians participating in LCS.
We performed semi-structured interviews, which were transcribed and analyzed using directed content analysis, guided by a theoretical model of patient-clinician communication.
We interviewed 24 clinicians including LCS coordinators (2), pulmonologists (3), and primary care providers (17), 4 of whom worked for the LCS program, a thoracic surgeon, and a radiologist.
All clinicians agreed with the goal of SDM, to ensure the screening decision was congruent with the patient's values. The depth and type of information presented by each clinician role varied considerably. LCS coordinators presented detailed information including numeric estimates of benefit and harm. Most PCPs explained the process more generally, focusing on logistics and the high rate of nodule detection. No clinician explicitly elicited values or communication preferences. Many PCPs tailored the conversation based on their implicit understanding of patients' values and preferences, gained from past experiences. PCPs reported that time, lack of detailed personal knowledge of LCS, and patient preferences were barriers to SDM. Many clinicians perceived that a significant proportion of patients were not interested in specific percentages and preferred to receive a clinician recommendation.
Our results suggest that clinicians support the goal of SDM for LCS decisions but PCPs may not perform some of its elements. The lack of completion of some elements, such as PCPs' lack of in-depth information exchange, may reflect perceived patient preferences for communication. As LCS is implemented, further research is needed to support a personalized, patient-centered approach to produce better outcomes.
对于考虑进行肺癌筛查(LCS)的患者,共同决策(SDM)得到医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心的广泛推荐和要求。
我们在三个设有筛查项目的医疗中心,研究了临床医生在LCS方面的沟通实践以及对SDM的认知障碍。
对参与LCS的临床医生进行多中心定性研究。
我们进行了半结构化访谈,访谈内容经转录后,采用定向内容分析法进行分析,并以患者 - 临床医生沟通的理论模型为指导。
我们采访了24名临床医生,包括LCS协调员(2名)、肺科医生(3名)和初级保健提供者(17名),其中4人在LCS项目工作,还有一名胸外科医生和一名放射科医生。
所有临床医生都认同SDM的目标,即确保筛查决策与患者价值观一致。每个临床医生角色提供的信息深度和类型差异很大。LCS协调员提供了详细信息,包括获益和危害的数值估计。大多数初级保健提供者更笼统地解释了流程,重点是后勤保障和结节检测率。没有临床医生明确引出价值观或沟通偏好。许多初级保健提供者根据他们从过去经验中对患者价值观和偏好的隐性理解来调整谈话。初级保健提供者报告说,时间、对LCS缺乏详细的个人了解以及患者偏好是SDM的障碍。许多临床医生认为很大一部分患者对具体百分比不感兴趣,更愿意接受临床医生的建议。
我们的结果表明,临床医生支持在LCS决策中采用SDM的目标,但初级保健提供者可能未执行其中一些要素。某些要素未完成,例如初级保健提供者缺乏深入的信息交流,可能反映了他们所感知的患者沟通偏好。随着LCS的实施,需要进一步研究以支持个性化、以患者为中心的方法,从而产生更好的结果。