Caverly Tanner J, Skurla Sarah E, Robinson Claire H, Zikmund-Fisher Brian J, Hayward Rodney A
Center for Clinical Management Research, Department of Veterans Affairs, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
MDM Policy Pract. 2021 Oct 26;6(2):23814683211055120. doi: 10.1177/23814683211055120. eCollection 2021 Jul-Dec.
Detailed or "full" shared decision making (SDM) about cancer screening is difficult in the primary care setting. Time spent discussing cancer screening is time not spent on other important issues. Given time constraints, brief SDM that is incomplete but addresses key elements may be feasible and acceptable. However, little is known about how patients feel about abbreviated SDM. This study assessed patient perspectives on a compromise solution ("everyday SDM"): 1) primary care provided makes a tailored recommendation, 2) briefly presents qualitative information on key tradeoffs, and 3) conveys full support for decisional autonomy and desires for more information. We recruited a stratified random sample of Veterans from an academic Veterans Affairs medical center who were eligible for lung cancer screening, oversampling women and minority patients, to attend a 6-hour deliberative focus group. Experts informed participants about cancer screening, factors that influence screening benefits, and the role of patient preferences. Then, facilitator-led small groups elicited patient questions and informed opinions about the everyday SDM proposal, its acceptability, and their recommendations for improvement. Thirty-six Veterans with a heavy smoking history participated (50% male, 83% white). There was a strong consensus that everyday SDM was acceptable patients were the final deciders and could get more information on request. Participants broadly recommended that clinicians only mention downsides directly related to screening and avoid discussion of potential downstream harms (such as biopsies). Although further testing in more diverse populations and different conditions is needed, these patients found the everyday SDM approach to be acceptable for routine lung cancer screening discussions, despite its use of an explicit recommendation and presentation of only qualitative information.
在初级医疗环境中,就癌症筛查进行详细或“全面”的共同决策(SDM)存在困难。用于讨论癌症筛查的时间,就无法用于其他重要问题。鉴于时间限制,简短但不完整却涵盖关键要素的SDM可能是可行且可接受的。然而,对于患者对简化版SDM的感受知之甚少。本研究评估了患者对一种折衷方案(“日常SDM”)的看法:1)初级医疗提供量身定制的建议;2)简要介绍关键权衡的定性信息;3)充分支持决策自主权并表达对更多信息的需求。我们从一家学术性退伍军人事务医疗中心招募了符合肺癌筛查条件的退伍军人分层随机样本,对女性和少数族裔患者进行了过度抽样,让他们参加一个为期6小时的审议焦点小组。专家向参与者介绍了癌症筛查、影响筛查益处的因素以及患者偏好的作用。然后,主持人引导小组讨论,收集患者对日常SDM提案的问题、其可接受性以及改进建议。36名有重度吸烟史的退伍军人参与了研究(50%为男性,83%为白人)。大家强烈认为日常SDM是可接受的——患者是最终决策者,可根据需要获取更多信息。参与者普遍建议临床医生只直接提及与筛查直接相关的不利之处,避免讨论潜在的下游危害(如活检)。尽管需要在更多样化的人群和不同条件下进行进一步测试,但这些患者发现日常SDM方法对于常规肺癌筛查讨论是可接受的,尽管它使用了明确的建议且仅呈现定性信息。