Jones Lynne C, Maurer Anne M, Parks Michael L, Noble Philip C, Harwell Carla, Harrington Melvyn, Bay Katherine G, Nelson Charles L, O'Connor Mary I
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Analytics Center of Excellence, Zimmer Biomet, Inc., Warsaw, IN, USA.
J Family Med Prim Care. 2022 Sep;11(9):5447-5456. doi: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_2188_21. Epub 2022 Oct 14.
Patients with chronic knee pain are often unaware of treatment options and likely outcomes-information that is critical to decision-making. A consistent framework for communicating patient-personalized information enables clinicians to provide consistent, targeted, and relevant information. Our objective was to user-test a shared decision-making (SDM) tool for chronic knee pain.
A cross-functional team developed a Markov-based health economics model and tested the model outputs with patient panels, patient and clinician focus groups, and clinical specialists. The resulting SDM tool was user-tested in a parallel-designed, randomized controlled study with 52 African American and 52 Latina women from geographically representative areas of the US. Participants were randomized to counseling with or without the SDM tool. Feedback was collected at intervention and at 1 month after intervention and analyzed with Student's t-tests and Chi-squared analyses (alpha = 0.05).
Qualitative results indicated patients understood the material, rated the overall experience highly, and were likely to recommend the physician. The SDM group reported high satisfaction with the tool. A greater proportion of the SDM group (56%) reported increased physical activity over baseline at 1 month compared with the control group (33%) ( = 0.0005). New use of medications for knee pain (58% SDM; 49% control) did not differ significantly between groups ( = 0.15).
Use of this innovative SDM tool was associated with high satisfaction and a significant increase in self-reported physical activity level at 1 month. The SDM tool may elicit behavioral changes to promote musculoskeletal health.
慢性膝关节疼痛患者往往不了解治疗方案及可能的疗效——这些信息对决策至关重要。一个用于传达患者个性化信息的一致框架能使临床医生提供一致、有针对性且相关的信息。我们的目标是对一种用于慢性膝关节疼痛的共享决策(SDM)工具进行用户测试。
一个跨职能团队开发了一个基于马尔可夫的健康经济学模型,并用患者小组、患者和临床医生焦点小组以及临床专家对模型输出结果进行测试。由此产生的SDM工具在一项平行设计的随机对照研究中进行了用户测试,该研究纳入了来自美国地理代表性地区的52名非裔美国女性和52名拉丁裔女性。参与者被随机分为接受或不接受SDM工具咨询。在干预时和干预后1个月收集反馈,并采用学生t检验和卡方分析进行分析(α = 0.05)。
定性结果表明患者理解了材料内容,对总体体验评价很高,并且很可能推荐该医生。SDM组对该工具表示高度满意。与对照组(33%)相比,SDM组中有更大比例(56%)的患者在1个月时报告与基线相比身体活动增加(P = 0.0005)。两组在用于膝关节疼痛的新用药情况方面(SDM组为58%;对照组为49%)差异无统计学意义(P = 0.15)。
使用这种创新的SDM工具与高满意度以及干预后1个月自我报告的身体活动水平显著增加相关。该SDM工具可能引发行为改变以促进肌肉骨骼健康。