Department of Surgery, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
HealthPartners Institute/Regions Hospital Emergency Medicine, St Paul, MN, USA.
Med Decis Making. 2023 May;43(4):487-497. doi: 10.1177/0272989X231164142. Epub 2023 Apr 10.
Surgeons are entrusted with providing patients with information necessary for deliberation about surgical intervention. Ideally, surgical consultations generate a shared understanding of the treatment experience and determine whether surgery aligns with a patient's overall health goals. In-depth assessment of communication patterns might reveal opportunities to better achieve these objectives.
We performed a secondary analysis of audio-recorded consultations between surgeons and patients considering high-risk surgery. For 43 surgeons, we randomly selected 4 transcripts each of consultations with patients aged ≥60 y with at least 1 comorbidity. We developed a coding taxonomy, based on principles of informed consent and shared decision making, to categorize surgeon speech. We grouped transcripts by treatment plan and recorded the treatment goal. We used box plots, Sankey diagrams, and flow diagrams to characterize communication patterns.
We included 169 transcripts, of which 136 discussed an oncologic problem and 33 considered a vascular (including cardiac and neurovascular) problem. At the median, surgeons devoted an estimated 8 min (interquartile range 5-13 min) to content specifically about intervention including surgery. In 85.5% of conversations, more than 40% of surgeon speech was consumed by technical descriptions of the disease or treatment. "Fix-it" language was used in 91.7% of conversations. In 79.9% of conversations, no overall goal of treatment was established or only a desire to cure or control cancer was expressed. Most conversations (68.6%) began with an explanation of the disease, followed by explanation of the treatment in 53.3%, and then options in 16.6%.
Explanation of disease and treatment dominate surgical consultations, with limited time spent on patient goals. Changing the focus of these conversations may better support patients' deliberation about the value of surgery. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02623335.
In decision-making conversations about high-risk surgical intervention, surgeons emphasize description of the patient's disease and potential treatment, and the use of "fix-it" language is common.Surgeons dedicated limited time to eliciting patient preferences and goals, and 79.9% of conversations resulted in no explicit goal of treatment.Current communication practices may be inadequate to support deliberation about the value of surgery for individual patients and their families.
外科医生负责向患者提供有关手术干预的必要信息。理想情况下,外科咨询应能让医患双方对治疗体验有共同的理解,并确定手术是否符合患者的整体健康目标。深入评估沟通模式可能会发现改善这些目标的机会。
我们对考虑高危手术的外科医生和患者之间的音频记录咨询进行了二次分析。对于 43 名外科医生,我们随机选择了每个年龄≥60 岁且至少有 1 种合并症的患者的 4 份咨询记录。我们根据知情同意和共同决策的原则,制定了一个分类法,对医生的讲话进行分类。我们根据治疗计划对记录进行分组,并记录治疗目标。我们使用箱线图、桑基图和流程图来描述沟通模式。
我们共纳入了 169 份记录,其中 136 份讨论了肿瘤问题,33 份讨论了血管问题(包括心脏和神经血管)。在中位数上,外科医生专门讨论干预措施(包括手术)的时间估计为 8 分钟(四分位距 5-13 分钟)。在 85.5%的谈话中,超过 40%的外科医生讲话内容是疾病或治疗的技术描述。91.7%的谈话中使用了“修复”语言。在 79.9%的谈话中,没有确立治疗的总体目标,或者仅表达了治愈或控制癌症的愿望。大多数谈话(68.6%)以解释疾病开始,然后 53.3%的谈话解释治疗,16.6%的谈话讨论治疗方案。
疾病和治疗的解释主导了外科咨询,而患者目标的讨论时间有限。改变这些谈话的重点可能会更好地支持患者对手术价值的思考。临床试验注册号:NCT02623335。
在高危手术干预的决策对话中,外科医生强调描述患者的疾病和潜在治疗方法,并且经常使用“修复”语言。外科医生专门用于了解患者偏好和目标的时间有限,并且 79.9%的谈话没有明确的治疗目标。当前的沟通实践可能不足以支持患者及其家属对手术对个人的价值进行思考。