Centre douleur chronique - Hôpital Paris Saint-Joseph, Paris, France.
Département de recherche clinique, Hôpital Paris Saint-Joseph, Paris, France.
BMC Med Ethics. 2024 Sep 18;25(1):97. doi: 10.1186/s12910-024-01096-y.
Patient decision-making autonomy refers to the patients' ability to freely exert their own choices and make their own decisions, given sufficient resources and information to do so. In pain medicine, it is accepted that appropriate beneficial management aims to propose an individualized treatment plan shared with the patients, as agents, to help them live as autonomously as possible with their pain. However, are patients in chronic pain centers sufficiently autonomous to participate in the therapeutic decisions that concern them? As this question still remains unanswered, a pilot study was set up to that aim.
Over a 2-month period, first-time patients within a tertiary multidisciplinary pain center underwent a systematic evaluation of their autonomy using the MacArthur Competence Assessment Tool for Treatment (MacCAT-T), considered the benchmark tool for measuring a patient's ability to consent to treatment. Demographic data and pain characteristics of the patients were collected and their respective attending pain physicians were asked to clinically assess their patients' degree of autonomy. Another physician, who had not participated in the initial patient evaluation, subsequently administered the MacCAT-T questionnaire to the same patients.
Twenty-seven patients were included during the study period (21 women and 6 men), with an average age of 50 years. The average duration of pain was 8 years. Based on their clinical experience, the 4 different pain physicians in charge of these patients considered that out of 25 assessed patients, 22 of them (89%) had full decision-making capacity, with no deficit in autonomy. According to the MacCAT-T results, only 13 of these 25 patients (48%) had no deficit, while 7 (26%) had a major deficit in autonomy. The only patient characteristic that appeared to be related to autonomy was pain type, specifically nociplastic pain. The average time taken to complete the test was 20 min, and patients were very satisfied with the interview.
Results from the present pilot study suggest that patients suffering from chronic pain do not appear to be entirely autonomous in their decision to consent to the proposed treatment plan according to the MacCAT-T questionnaire, and physicians seem to find it difficult to properly assess this competence in a clinical setting. Further studies with larger samples are needed to better evaluate this concept to improve the complex management of these patients.
患者决策自主性是指患者在获得充分的资源和信息的情况下,能够自由地做出选择和决策。在疼痛医学中,人们普遍认为,适当的有益管理旨在与患者共同提出个体化的治疗计划,帮助他们尽可能自主地应对疼痛。然而,慢性疼痛中心的患者是否有足够的自主性来参与与他们相关的治疗决策?由于这个问题仍未得到解答,因此进行了一项试点研究。
在为期两个月的时间里,三级多学科疼痛中心的首次就诊患者使用 MacArthur 治疗能力评估工具(MacCAT-T)对其自主性进行了系统评估,该工具被认为是衡量患者同意治疗能力的基准工具。收集患者的人口统计学数据和疼痛特征,并请各自的主治疼痛医师评估患者的自主性程度。另一位没有参与初始患者评估的医生随后向同一批患者发放了 MacCAT-T 问卷。
在研究期间,共有 27 名患者入组(21 名女性和 6 名男性),平均年龄为 50 岁。疼痛平均持续 8 年。根据他们的临床经验,负责这些患者的 4 位不同的疼痛医师认为,在评估的 25 名患者中,有 22 名(89%)具有完全的决策能力,没有自主性缺陷。根据 MacCAT-T 的结果,这 25 名患者中只有 13 名(48%)没有缺陷,而 7 名(26%)自主性存在严重缺陷。唯一与自主性相关的患者特征是疼痛类型,具体为神经病理性疼痛。完成测试的平均时间为 20 分钟,患者对访谈非常满意。
本试点研究的结果表明,根据 MacCAT-T 问卷,患有慢性疼痛的患者在同意所提议的治疗计划方面似乎并非完全自主,并且医师似乎难以在临床环境中正确评估这种能力。需要进一步进行更大样本的研究,以更好地评估这一概念,从而改善对这些患者的复杂管理。