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加拿大各省和地区在 COVID-19 大流行期间的决策和决策需求:基于人口的横断面调查。

Decisions and Decisional Needs of Canadians From all Provinces and Territories During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Population-Based Cross-sectional Surveys.

机构信息

School of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

Centre for Implementation Research, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

出版信息

JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2023 Mar 21;9:e43652. doi: 10.2196/43652.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Never before COVID-19 had Canadians faced making health-related decisions in a context of significant uncertainty. However, little is known about which type of decisions and the types of difficulties that they faced.

OBJECTIVE

We sought to identify the health-related decisions and decisional needs of Canadians.

METHODS

Our study was codesigned by researchers and knowledge users (eg, patients, clinicians). Informed by the CHERRIES (the Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys) reporting guideline, we conducted 2 online surveys of random samples drawn from the Leger consumer panel of 400,000 Canadians. Eligible participants were adults (≥18 years) who received or were receiving any health services in the past 12 months for themselves (adults) or for their child (parent) or senior with cognitive impairment (caregiver). We assessed decisions and decisional needs using questions informed by the Ottawa Decision Support Framework, including decisional conflict and decision regret using the Decision Conflict Scale (DCS) and the Decision Regret Scale (DRS), respectively. Descriptive statistics were conducted for adults who had decided for themselves or on behalf of someone else. Significant decisional conflict (SDC) was defined as a total DCS score of >37.5 out of 100, and significant decision regret was defined as a total DRS score of >25 out of 100.

RESULTS

From May 18 to June 4, 2021, 14,459 adults and 6542 parents/caregivers were invited to participate. The invitation view rate was 15.5% (2236/14,459) and 28.3% (1850/6542); participation rate, 69.3% (1549/2236) and 28.7% (531/1850); and completion rate, 97.3% (1507/1549) and 95.1% (505/531), respectively. The survey was completed by 1454 (97.3%) adults and 438 (95.1%) parents/caregivers in English (1598/1892, 84.5%) or French (294/1892, 15.5%). Respondents from all 10 Canadian provinces and the northern territories represented a range of ages, education levels, civil statuses, ethnicities, and annual household income. Of 1892 respondents, 541 (28.6%) self-identified as members of marginalized groups. The most frequent decisions were (adults vs parents/caregivers) as follows: COVID-19 vaccination (490/1454, 33.7%, vs 87/438, 19.9%), managing a health condition (253/1454, 17.4%, vs 47/438, 10.7%), other COVID-19 decisions (158/1454, 10.9%, vs 85/438, 19.4%), mental health care (128/1454, 8.8%, vs 27/438, 6.2%), and medication treatments (115/1454, 7.9%, vs 23/438, 5.3%). Caregivers also reported decisions about moving family members to/from nursing or retirement homes (48/438, 11.0%). Adults (323/1454, 22.2%) and parents/caregivers (95/438, 21.7%) had SDC. Factors making decisions difficult were worrying about choosing the wrong option (557/1454, 38.3%, vs 184/438, 42.0%), worrying about getting COVID-19 (506/1454, 34.8%, vs 173/438, 39.5%), public health restrictions (427/1454, 29.4%, vs 158/438, 36.1%), information overload (300/1454, 20.6%, vs 77/438, 17.6%), difficulty separating misinformation from scientific evidence (297/1454, 20.4%, vs 77/438, 17.6%), and difficulty discussing decisions with clinicians (224/1454, 15.4%, vs 51/438, 11.6%). For 1318 (90.6%) adults and 366 (83.6%) parents/caregivers who had decided, 353 (26.8%) and 125 (34.2%) had significant decision regret, respectively. In addition, 1028 (50%) respondents made their decision alone without considering the opinions of clinicians.

CONCLUSIONS

During COVID-19, Canadians who responded to the survey faced several new health-related decisions. Many reported unmet decision-making needs, resulting in SDC and decision regret. Interventions can be designed to address their decisional needs and support patients facing new health-related decisions.

摘要

背景

在 COVID-19 之前,加拿大人从未在重大不确定性的情况下做出与健康相关的决定。然而,人们对他们面临的决策类型和困难类型知之甚少。

目的

我们旨在确定加拿大与健康相关的决策和决策需求。

方法

我们的研究由研究人员和知识使用者(例如患者、临床医生)共同设计。根据互联网电子调查结果报告指南(CHERRIES)的报告准则,我们对来自 40 万加拿大人的莱格消费者小组的随机样本进行了 2 项在线调查。合格的参与者是在过去 12 个月内为自己(成年人)或为其孩子(父母)或认知障碍的老年人(照顾者)接受或正在接受任何健康服务的成年人。我们使用奥塔瓦决策支持框架(Ottawa Decision Support Framework)提供的问题评估决策和决策需求,包括使用决策冲突量表(Decision Conflict Scale,DCS)和决策后悔量表(Decision Regret Scale,DRS)分别评估决策冲突和决策后悔。对为自己或代表他人做出决定的成年人进行描述性统计。显著的决策冲突(Significant decisional conflict,SDC)定义为总分 DCS 评分>37.5 分(满分 100 分),显著的决策后悔定义为总分 DRS 评分>25 分(满分 100 分)。

结果

2021 年 5 月 18 日至 6 月 4 日,邀请了 14459 名成年人和 6542 名父母/照顾者参加。邀请查看率为 15.5%(2236/14459)和 28.3%(1850/6542);参与率为 69.3%(1549/2236)和 28.7%(531/1850);完成率为 97.3%(1507/1549)和 95.1%(505/531)。1549 名成年人(97.3%)和 438 名父母/照顾者(95.1%)以英语(1598/1892,84.5%)或法语(294/1892,15.5%)完成了调查。来自加拿大所有 10 个省和北方地区的 1892 名受访者代表了一系列年龄、教育水平、公民身份、族裔和家庭年收入。在 1892 名受访者中,541 名(28.6%)自认为属于弱势群体成员。最常见的决策如下(成年人与父母/照顾者相比):COVID-19 疫苗接种(490/1454,33.7%,vs 87/438,19.9%)、管理健康状况(253/1454,17.4%,vs 47/438,10.7%)、其他 COVID-19 决策(158/1454,10.9%,vs 85/438,19.4%)、心理健康护理(128/1454,8.8%,vs 27/438,6.2%)和药物治疗(115/1454,7.9%,vs 23/438,5.3%)。照顾者还报告了有关将家庭成员转移到/从疗养院或退休之家的决策(48/438,11.0%)。成年人(323/1454,22.2%)和父母/照顾者(95/438,21.7%)存在显著的决策冲突。使决策变得困难的因素包括担心选择错误的选项(557/1454,38.3%,vs 184/438,42.0%)、担心感染 COVID-19(506/1454,34.8%,vs 173/438,39.5%)、公共卫生限制(427/1454,29.4%,vs 158/438,36.1%)、信息过载(300/1454,20.6%,vs 77/438,17.6%)、难以将错误信息与科学证据区分开来(297/1454,20.4%,vs 77/438,17.6%)以及难以与临床医生讨论决策(224/1454,15.4%,vs 51/438,11.6%)。对于 1318 名(90.6%)做出决定的成年人和 366 名(83.6%)父母/照顾者,353 名(26.8%)和 125 名(34.2%)有显著的决策后悔。此外,1028 名(50%)受访者独自做出决定,没有考虑临床医生的意见。

结论

在 COVID-19 期间,对调查做出回应的加拿大人面临着一些新的与健康相关的决策。许多人报告说存在未满足的决策需求,导致决策冲突和决策后悔。可以设计干预措施来满足他们的决策需求,并支持面临新的与健康相关的决策的患者。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/da4a/10131685/7c47112820a5/publichealth_v9i1e43652_fig1.jpg

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