| Literature DB >> 20978060 |
Sian K Smith1, Lyndal Trevena, Judy M Simpson, Alexandra Barratt, Don Nutbeam, Kirsten J McCaffery.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a decision aid designed for adults with low education and literacy can support informed choice and involvement in decisions about screening for bowel cancer.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20978060 PMCID: PMC2965151 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.c5370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138
Comparison between decision aid and government booklet
| Component/feature | Decision aid booklet | Government booklet |
|---|---|---|
| General description | Paper based, interactive (33 page) booklet (and accompanying DVD) containing written and quantitative information about bowel cancer and bowel cancer screening. Flesch-Kincaid readability score=grade 7 | Paper based, 20 page booklet with written and quantitative information about bowel cancer and bowel cancer screening. Flesch-Kincaid readability score=grade 9 |
| Visual aspects | Use of simplified text and bullet points. Glossary of medical terms. Visual illustrations and cues. Medical diagram of bowel | Use of plain language. Large amounts of text on each page. Photographs of adults within target age range. Medical diagram of digestive system |
| Key factual content | Purpose of cancer screening—that is, to detect bowel cancer at an early stage. Bowel cancer and its risk factors. Risk of bowel cancer based on family history. Faecal occult blood testing procedure. Colonoscopy procedure as follow-up investigation and associated risks | Purpose of cancer screening—that is, to detect bowel cancer at an early stage. Bowel cancer and its risk factors. Faecal occult blood testing procedure. Colonoscopy procedure as follow-up investigation and associated risks |
| Use of tailored information | Tailored risk information for age, sex, and family history groups about cumulative outcomes of biennial screening using faecal occult blood testing | None |
| Presentation of quantitative information | Systematic 1000 oval diagrams (see web extra appendix 1) using natural frequencies, time frames, and consistent denominators used to convey: absolute risk reduction in mortality from bowel cancer with (and without) biennial screening using faecal occult blood testing over 10 years; and probability of cumulative outcomes of screening using faecal occult blood testing (including risk of false positives, false negatives, interval cancers, removal of polyps detected by colonoscopy, and detection of bowel cancer) | Bar chart displaying prevalence of mortality from bowel cancer in Australia for men and women, comparison with other types of cancers. Relative risk reduction statement about the efficacy of faecal occult blood testing: “[FOBT] can reduce your risk of dying from bowel cancer by up to one third” |
| Values clarification exercise | Interactive personal worksheet tailored for sex and family history groups (see web extra appendix 2) | None |

Flow of participants through trial
Baseline characteristics of participants (n=572) allocated to decision aid intervention (with and without question prompt list) and standard information (control group)
| Characteristics | No (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Decision aid+question prompt list (n=196) | Decision aid+DVD (n=188) | Standard information (n=188) | |
| Women | 97 (50) | 93 (50) | 94 (50) |
| Men | 99 (51) | 95 (51) | 94 (50) |
| Education: | |||
| No formal qualifications | 4 (2) | 4 (2) | 6 (3) |
| Intermediate school certificate* | 132 (67) | 129 (69) | 131 (70) |
| Technical or trade certificate† | 64 (33) | 59 (31) | 57 (30) |
| Years in full time education: | |||
| 0-10 | 116 (59) | 106 (56) | 107 (57) |
| 11-20 | 78 (40) | 81 (43) | 79 (42) |
| Country of birth: | |||
| Australia or New Zealand | 177 (90) | 162 (86) | 158 (84) |
| United Kingdom | 11 (6) | 16 (9) | 9 (5) |
| Other | 8 (4) | 10 (5) | 21 (11) |
| Difficulties understanding written health information: | |||
| Never | 64 (33) | 62 (33) | 56 (30) |
| Occasionally or sometimes | 102 (52) | 113 (60) | 118 (63) |
| Often or always | 29 (15) | 11 (6) | 12 (6) |
| Confidence filling in medical forms: | |||
| None | 38 (19) | 35 (19) | 24 (13) |
| Some or quite a bit | 108 (55) | 99 (53) | 114 (61) |
| Very | 50 (26) | 54 (29) | 49 (26) |
| Help with reading hospital forms: | |||
| Never | 103 (53) | 100 (53) | 115 (61) |
| Occasionally or sometimes | 57 (29) | 56 (30) | 44 (23) |
| Often or always | 23 (12) | 14 (7) | 15 (8) |
| Not applicable | 13 (7) | 18 (10) | 14 (7) |
| Self reported health: | |||
| Excellent or very good | 98 (50) | 80 (43) | 93 (50) |
| Good | 71 (36) | 69 (37) | 54 (29) |
| Fair or poor | 35 (18) | 39 (21) | 41 (22) |
| Family history of bowel cancer: | |||
| Yes | 25 (13) | 16 (9) | 21 (11) |
| No | 167 (85) | 167 (89) | 164 (87) |
| Worry about developing bowel cancer: | |||
| None or a bit | 170 (91) | 184 (94) | 172 (92) |
| Quite or very | 17 (9) | 11 (6) | 16 (9) |
| Interest in screening using faecal occult blood test: | |||
| Very or fairly | 136 (69) | 135 (72) | 131 (70) |
| A bit or not very | 57 (29) | 49 (26) | 51 (27) |
| Preferences for involvement in screening decision: | |||
| Patient decides alone | 68 (35) | 75 (40) | 78 (41) |
| Patient decides after consulting | 41 (21) | 28 (15) | 39 (21) |
| Share decision equally | 72 (37) | 70 (37) | 54 (29) |
| Doctor decides after consulting or alone | 13 (7) | 14 (8) | 21 (7) |
| Knowledge scores (maximum 4)‡: | |||
| Mean (SD) | 2.37 (1.62) | 2.32 (1.53) | 2.23 (1.64) |
*Certificate awarded to students aged 15 or 16 years in Australian high school.
†Approximately equivalent to national vocational qualification in United Kingdom.
‡Conceptual knowledge was only measured at baseline.
Primary outcomes for decision aid intervention groups combined and standard information (control) group. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise
| Outcome* | Decision aid groups combined (n=357) | Standard information group (n=173) | Difference (decision aid−control) (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge scores (mean, SD)†: | ||||
| Concept (maximum score 4) | 3.57 (1.0) | 3.53 (0.96) | 0.04 (−0.14 to 0.22) | 0.64 |
| Numerical (maximum score 8) | 2.93 (2.91) | 0.58 (1.28) | 2.35 (1.89 to 2.80) | <0.001 |
| Total knowledge score (maximum score 12) | 6.50 (3.34) | 4.10 (1.71) | 2.39 (1.86 to 2.92) | <0.001 |
| Adequate knowledge (total score ≥50%) | 200 (56) | 32 (19) | 37.5 (30.0 to 45.0) | <0.001 |
| Attitudes‡: | ||||
| Mean (SD) score | 26.4 (3.6) | 27.3 (2.7) | −0.91 (−1.51 to −0.31) | 0.003 |
| Positive attitudes towards screening | 182 (51) | 112 (65) | −14.1 (−23.0 to −5.0) | 0.002 |
| Completed screening test§ | 211 (59) | 130 (75) | −16.0 (−24.0 to −8.0) | <0.001 |
| Informed choice | 121 (34) | 21 (12) | 22.0 (15.0 to 29.0) | <0.001 |
| Involvement preferences in screening decision¶: | ||||
| Participant decides alone | 321 (90) | 164 (96) | −5.5 | 0.04** |
| Participant decides after consulting doctor | 14 (4) | 2 (1) | 2.7 | |
| Share decision equally | 17 (5) | 5 (3) | 1.9 | |
| Doctor decides after consulting or alone | 3 (1) | 0 (0) | 0.9 |
*For some variables a small proportion of data was missing (between 1 and 3 cases).
†Maximum concept and numerical knowledge score, 4 and 8, respectively; maximum total knowledge score, 12.
‡Attitudes scale 6-30: the higher the score, the more positive the attitude towards bowel cancer screening. Scores ≥27 (median) were taken to indicate positive attitudes.
§Determined from laboratory records checked three months post-intervention.
¶Values for difference are percentages.
**P value for test for trend in proportions.
Distribution of informed or uninformed choices for decision aid and control groups. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise
| Choices and preferences for screening | Adequate knowledge | Positive attitudes | Uptake | Decision aid groups combined (n=357) | Standard information group (n=172) | % Difference (decision aid−control) (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informed choice: | 120 (34) | 20 (12) | 22 (15 to 29) | |||
| Accept | Yes | Yes | Yes | 72 (20) | 18 (11) | 11 (4 to 16) |
| Decline | Yes | No | No | 48 (13) | 2 (1) | 12 (8 to 13) |
| Partly uninformed choice*: | ||||||
| Accept | Yes | No | Yes | 51 (14) | 9 (5) | 9 (2 to 16) |
| Decline | Yes | Yes | No | 29 (8) | 3 (2) | 6 (3 to 10) |
| Accept | No | Yes | Yes | 52 (15) | 71 (41) | −26 (−35 to −19) |
| Decline | No | No | No | 40 (11) | 17 (10) | 1 (−4 to 7) |
| Completely uninformed choice†: | ||||||
| Accept | No | No | Yes | 36 (10) | 32 (19) | −9 (−15 to 2) |
| Decline | No | Yes | No | 29 (8) | 20 (12) | −4 (−6 to 2) |
*Adequate knowledge or consistent attitudes and behaviour.
†Inadequate knowledge and inconsistent attitudes and behaviour.
Secondary outcomes for decision aid intervention groups combined and control group. Values are numbers (percentages) unless stated otherwise
| Outcome* | Decision aid groups combined (n=357) | Standard information group (n=173) | Difference (decision aid−control) (95% CI) | P value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) decision satisfaction† | 4.21 (0.44) | 4.21 (0.43) | 0.00 (−0.09 to 0.08) | 0.91 |
| Mean (SD) confidence in decision making‡ | 4.67 (0.54) | 4.61 (0.62) | 0.06 (−0.04 to 0.16) | 0.26 |
| Mean (SD) anxiety§ | 28.20 (9.75) | 28.43 (10.56) | −0.23 (−0.62 to 0.45) | 0.80 |
| Total score: | 0.02** | |||
| 0 | 181 (51) | 65 (38) | 13 | |
| 1-25 | 101 (28) | 73 (42) | −14 | |
| >25 | 75 (21) | 35 (20) | 1 | |
| Informed subscale: | 0.03** | |||
| 0 | 233 (65) | 90 (52) | 13 | |
| 1-25 | 22 (6) | 13 (8) | −2 | |
| >25 | 102 (29) | 70 (41) | −12 | |
| Uncertainty subscale: | 0.89** | |||
| 0 | 275 (77) | 134 (78) | −1 | |
| 1-25 | 15 (4) | 5 (3) | 1 | |
| >25 | 67 (19) | 34 (20) | −1 | |
| Values clarity subscale: | 0.99** | |||
| 0 | 276 (78) | 134 (78) | 0 | |
| 1-25 | 22 (6) | 8 (5) | 1 | |
| >25 | 59 (17) | 31 (18) | −1 | |
| Support subscale: | 0.38** | |||
| 0 | 280 (78) | 130 (75) | 3 | |
| 1-25 | 13 (4) | 7 (4) | 0 | |
| >25 | 64 (18) | 36 (21) | −3 | |
| Worry about developing bowel cancer: | 0.78†† | |||
| None or a bit | 335 (94) | 159 (92) | 2 | |
| Quite or very | 22 (6) | 14 (8) | −2 | |
| Change in worry: | 0.89†† | |||
| Less worried | 50 (14) | 24 (14) | 0 | |
| No change | 252 (71) | 121 (70) | 1 | |
| More worried | 54 (15) | 27 (16) | −0.5 | |
*For some variables a small proportion of data was missing for a maximum of 23 participants.
†10 item scale. Participants who did not answer more than five of the items were excluded from analysis.
‡Three item scale. Participants who did not answer more than one of the items were excluded from analysis.
§State trait anxiety inventory (short form) 6 item scale: 20-80, the higher the score, the greater the level of anxiety.
¶Decisional conflict scale (low literacy version): 0-100; 0=no decisional conflict; 100=extreme decisional conflict. Subscales: 0-100, where 0=extremely certain about best choice, extremely informed, extremely clear about personal values in relation to benefits or harms, extremely supported in decision making. Scores of 25 or lower are associated with implementing decisions.29 Values for difference are percentages.
**Mann-Whitney U test.
††P value for test for trend in proportions.