Hamm R M, Smith S L
Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City 73104, USA.
J Fam Pract. 1998 Jul;47(1):44-52.
We studied patients' understanding of the characteristics of diagnostic tests for six common conditions to determine what patients know about diagnostic uncertainties before they communicate with a doctor. We compared the accuracy of patients' estimates of disease probabilities and diagnostic test characteristics for diseases with which they did or did not have prior experience.
To measure patients' understanding of the uncertainty of diagnostic test results, questionnaires describing diseases were given to patients in clinic waiting rooms. For each of six diseases, a 2-page questionnaire presented a case history of the disease and its diagnostic test, and asked respondents to estimate the probability that the case patient has the suspected disease, the sensitivity of test, the specificity of test, and the probability that the patient has the disease if the test result is positive. It also asked whether the patient, a close friend, or family member had ever been thought to have this disease.
One hundred eighty-four patients in the clinic waiting room responded for at least one disease. Although patients judged the disease probabilities to be higher after a positive diagnostic test, each of their four judgments was essentially the same for all diseases, including those with high and low prior probabilities, and with accurate and inaccurate tests. Past experience with the disease was associated with only a minimal increase in the accuracy of patient knowledge.
Patients' ignorance of the uncertainties of diseases demonstrates the need for patient education when a disease is suspected. The lack of relation between knowledge and experience suggests that this need is not being effectively met. To convey the rates or probabilities, and to help the patients understand what the probabilities are based on, a physician should speak in terms that patients can easily understand.
我们研究了患者对六种常见病症诊断测试特征的理解,以确定患者在与医生交流之前对诊断不确定性的了解程度。我们比较了患者对有或没有先前经验的疾病的患病概率估计以及诊断测试特征的准确性。
为了衡量患者对诊断测试结果不确定性的理解,在诊所候诊室向患者发放了描述疾病的问卷。对于六种疾病中的每一种,一份两页的问卷呈现了该疾病的病史及其诊断测试,并要求受访者估计病例患者患有疑似疾病的概率、测试的敏感性、测试的特异性以及测试结果为阳性时患者患有该疾病的概率。问卷还询问了患者本人、密友或家庭成员是否曾被认为患有这种疾病。
诊所候诊室的184名患者至少对一种疾病做出了回应。尽管患者在诊断测试呈阳性后判断患病概率更高,但他们对所有疾病的四项判断基本相同,包括先前概率高和低的疾病,以及测试准确和不准确的疾病。过去对该疾病的经验仅使患者知识的准确性略有提高。
患者对疾病不确定性的无知表明,在怀疑患有疾病时需要对患者进行教育。知识与经验之间缺乏关联表明这一需求未得到有效满足。为了传达比率或概率,并帮助患者理解这些概率的依据,医生应该用患者容易理解的方式说话。