The Healthcare Improvement Studies (THIS) Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Health Expect. 2024 Feb;27(1):e13957. doi: 10.1111/hex.13957.
Diagnostic uncertainty is common, but its communication to patients is under-explored. This study aimed to (1) characterise variation in doctors' communication of diagnostic uncertainty and (2) explore why variation occurred.
Four written vignettes of clinical scenarios involving diagnostic uncertainty were developed. Doctors were recruited from five hospitals until theoretical saturation was reached (n = 36). Participants read vignettes in a randomised order, and were asked to discuss the diagnosis/plan with an online interviewer, as they would with a 'typical patient'. Semi-structured interviews explored reasons for communication choices. Interview transcripts were coded; quantitative and qualitative (thematic) analyses were undertaken.
There was marked variation in doctors' communication: in their discussion about differential diagnoses, their reference to the level of uncertainty in diagnoses/investigations and their acknowledgement of diagnostic uncertainty when safety-netting. Implicit expressions of uncertainty were more common than explicit. Participants expressed both different communication goals (including reducing patient anxiety, building trust, empowering patients and protecting against diagnostic errors) and different perspectives on how to achieve these goals. Training in diagnostic uncertainty communication is rare, but many felt it would be useful.
Significant variation in diagnostic uncertainty communication exists, even in a controlled setting. Differing communication goals-often grounded in conflicting ethical principles, for example, respect for autonomy versus nonmaleficence-and differing ideas on how to prioritise and achieve them may underlie this. The variation in communication behaviours observed has important implications for patient safety and health inequalities. Patient-focused research is required to guide practice.
In the design stage of the study, two patient and public involvement groups (consisting of members of the public of a range of ages and backgrounds) were consulted to gain an understanding of patient perspectives on the concept of communicating diagnostic uncertainty. Their feedback informed the formulations of the research questions and the choice of vignettes used.
诊断不确定性很常见,但对其向患者传达的方式却探讨不足。本研究旨在:(1) 描述医生传达诊断不确定性的方式的差异;(2) 探索产生差异的原因。
开发了四个涉及诊断不确定性的临床情景的书面病例。从五家医院招募医生,直到达到理论饱和(n=36)。参与者以随机顺序阅读病例,并被要求与在线访谈者讨论诊断/计划,就像与“典型患者”讨论一样。半结构化访谈探讨了沟通选择的原因。对访谈记录进行编码;进行定量和定性(主题)分析。
医生的沟通方式存在明显差异:他们对鉴别诊断的讨论、对诊断/检查不确定性程度的提及以及在安全网时对诊断不确定性的承认。隐含的不确定性表达比明确的表达更为常见。参与者表达了不同的沟通目标(包括减轻患者焦虑、建立信任、赋予患者权力和防止诊断错误),以及实现这些目标的不同观点。诊断不确定性沟通培训很少,但许多人认为这将是有用的。
即使在受控环境中,诊断不确定性沟通也存在显著差异。不同的沟通目标——通常基于相互冲突的伦理原则,例如尊重自主权与不伤害原则——以及对如何优先考虑和实现这些目标的不同看法可能是造成这种差异的原因。观察到的沟通行为差异对患者安全和健康不平等具有重要影响。需要进行以患者为中心的研究来指导实践。
在研究设计阶段,咨询了两个患者和公众参与小组(由不同年龄和背景的公众成员组成),以了解患者对传达诊断不确定性概念的看法。他们的反馈为研究问题的制定和病例选择提供了信息。