| Literature DB >> 20351877 |
Rita Kukafka1, Sharib A Khan, David Kaufman, Jessica Mark.
Abstract
To explore how patients and providers respond to Tailored Lifestyle Conversations (TLC), an evidence-based decision aid to help patients set priorities for selecting among multiple health behavior change goals, we conducted a study utilizing key informant interviews. Based on patient level assessment data, TLC presents tailored outputs that include 1) behavioral and clinical risk; 2) readiness and confidence scores for changing each of four behaviors; and 3) qualitative equations to elicit patient priorities for change. Patient priorities are documented in an action plan to be discussed with their provider during a clinical encounter. Interview questions probed how patients and providers responded to this output, and how heavily they valued the chance of success versus health benefit in deciding which behavior to work on first. The interviews also revealed how TLC might mediate the conversation around behavior change between patients and providers. TLC has potential to drive a more evidence based and patient centric approach to behavioral counseling in clinical settings.Entities:
Keywords: Computer-based tailoring; Decision support; Health behavior; Health promotion
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 20351877 PMCID: PMC2815369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMIA Annu Symp Proc ISSN: 1559-4076