OBJECTIVES: To determine whether psychological variables, particularly depression, influence patients' willingness to share medical decisions with family members or friends. DESIGN: Cross-sectional interviews. SETTING: Oncology and general geriatrics outpatient clinics of an urban VA medical center. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-five patients with a Charlson comorbidity index score greater than 5. MEASUREMENTS: Subjects described the way that they make health care decisions with friends or family as a dichotomous variable ("shared" versus "not shared") and as a 5-point ordinal variable (the degree to which they share decisions). Patients also completed the 15-item version of the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), the Global Distress Index of the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale, and selected tests of cognitive function and health literacy. RESULTS: Patients with a GDS score higher than 5 were more likely to share decision-making (16/26 versus 26/69; odds ratio 2.58; p = 0.040), as were patients who were married (23/35 versus 19/60; odds ratio 3.63; p = 0.001). In multivariable regression models, a short form GDS score higher than 5 was independently associated with a willingness to share decision with others. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that depression may have a clinically significant influence on patients' willingness to share health care decisions with others. Health care providers should be alert to this possibility, particularly when the decision at hand is significant.
OBJECTIVES: To determine whether psychological variables, particularly depression, influence patients' willingness to share medical decisions with family members or friends. DESIGN: Cross-sectional interviews. SETTING: Oncology and general geriatrics outpatient clinics of an urban VA medical center. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-five patients with a Charlson comorbidity index score greater than 5. MEASUREMENTS: Subjects described the way that they make health care decisions with friends or family as a dichotomous variable ("shared" versus "not shared") and as a 5-point ordinal variable (the degree to which they share decisions). Patients also completed the 15-item version of the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), the Global Distress Index of the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale, and selected tests of cognitive function and health literacy. RESULTS:Patients with a GDS score higher than 5 were more likely to share decision-making (16/26 versus 26/69; odds ratio 2.58; p = 0.040), as were patients who were married (23/35 versus 19/60; odds ratio 3.63; p = 0.001). In multivariable regression models, a short form GDS score higher than 5 was independently associated with a willingness to share decision with others. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that depression may have a clinically significant influence on patients' willingness to share health care decisions with others. Health care providers should be alert to this possibility, particularly when the decision at hand is significant.
Authors: Kathryn M Goggins; Kenneth A Wallston; Samuel Nwosu; Jonathan S Schildcrout; Liana Castel; Sunil Kripalani Journal: J Health Commun Date: 2014
Authors: Hanan J Aboumatar; Kathryn A Carson; Mary Catherine Beach; Debra L Roter; Lisa A Cooper Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2013-05-21 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Ana Isabel Gonzalez; Christine Schmucker; Joerg J Meerpohl; Christiane Muth; Julia Nothacker; Edith Motschall; Truc Sophia Nguyen; Maria-Sophie Brueckle; Jeanet Blom; Marjan van den Akker; Kristian Röttger; Odette Wegwarth; Tammy Hoffmann; Sharon E Straus; Ferdinand M Gerlach Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2019-12-15 Impact factor: 2.692