| Literature DB >> 24079577 |
Ellen A Lipstein1, William B Brinkman, Jessica Sage, Carole M Lannon, Esi Morgan Dewitt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The increase in therapeutic options for juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) has added complexity to treatment decisions. Shared decision making has the potential to help providers and families work together to choose the best possible option for each patient from the array of choices. As part of a needs assessment, prior to design and implementation of shared decision making interventions, we conducted a qualitative assessment of clinicians' current approaches to treatment decision making in JIA.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24079577 PMCID: PMC3849714 DOI: 10.1186/1546-0096-11-34
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Interview participants
| Median (Range) | 52.5 years (31–66) |
| Male | 4 (40%) |
| Female | 6 (60%) |
| White/Caucasian | 8 (80%) |
| Asian | 2 (20%) |
| Physicians | 8 (80%) |
| Attending | 6 |
| Fellow | 2 |
| Certified Nurse Practitioner | 2 (20%) |
| Median (Range) | 4.5 years (2–25) |
Clinicians’ decision process
| Preferred Treatment Approach | “I typically sort of set up a menu of possibilities, all of which are within that evidence-based realm, and I’m fairly comfortable with choices they make.” |
| “Well, so in my own mind, I have a certain approach I use… it’s divided up into kind of immediate short-term treatment and then also treatments that would address long-term disease control.” | |
| “So it all depends on how they present, what phase they get to us, how many joints, how much disability, how much systemic disease, and then try to be aggressive at first to get the thing under control.” | |
| “…now there’s treatment guidelines, so that makes it easier. I mean, kind of a step-wise approach.” | |
| Timing of Decision | “So after diagnosis has been reached I go through the different types of medications that we use to and I usually start by talking about the more benign medications.” |
| “A treatment plan can always change … whether it’s side effects or flare-up of disease or something like that or new medical literature that comes out.” | |
| “If it’s recurrence of disease after a long period of being quiet, you need to know what the family has been through before…” |
Treatment attributes
| Risks and Benefits | “…what percent would get side effects, percent that approved, how rapidly they can expect to see improvement.” |
| “So I usually give them a highlight of the risk and just the major…the ones that have the highest frequency of occurring and I will go through all of the minor side effects. And then talk about the benefits.” | |
| Logistics | “Route of administration is a big deal for patients. So, that certainly is something that really needs to be considered.” |
| “Usually, I will kind of explain that these are the options and… what potential cost might be.” | |
| “So I tell parents …. [the patient] could be on this medicine for a long time.” | |
| Family Preferences | “But it’s their choice, not mine.” |
| “You’re finding out and trying to understand what would work best on them from a treatment standpoint as far as administering the medication, what their insurance may or may not pay for, what their tolerance or intolerance to the potential specific side effects may be.” |
Working with families to make a decision
| Information Delivery | “Some people come and as soon as they hear a diagnosis, they can’t comprehend anything beyond that for that visit and then some, the more information you give them the less anxious they are in those kinds of things.” |
| “I give them data. I show them sheets that have summarized those risks.” | |
| “…some families deal better when you speak in more concrete terms versus other families that, you know, may be more well educated.” | |
| Parents’ Fears | “I find it’s harder to implement the injection therapies when the parents are afraid of giving the shot than when the child is afraid of getting the shot.” |
| “And then also, when you talk about immunosuppressant medications and maybe they’re worried about well what’s going to have an effect the rest of their lives.” | |
| “They might have apprehensions or things like that regarding certain or some of the drugs that we use so that can be inherent or an issue with us getting the medications that we would prefer a patient to be on…” | |
| Giving recommendations | “Patients aren’t always amendable to what we recommended.” |
| “In terms of the type of biologics, I generally recommend etanercept and that is just because we’ve used it a long time, there is data out there, longer sort of term data.” | |
| “And a lot of times, families say, you know, will ask what would you do if it were your child. So, I always say it’s very hard for me to put myself in their shoes but I tell them what I think I would choose if they ask that.” |
Challenges in JIA treatment decisions
| Limited long-term data | “They want to know long-term and as these biologics are coming up quicker and quicker, we don’t have some of that data yet and so I think that’s challenging for me.” |
| “…the unknowns about long-term use of these biologics … I think that factors in too, as far as any decision making that you have. That’s probably the biggest challenge.” | |
| When to stop treatment | “You’re really worried about whether when you taper, whether there’s going to be a worsening disease, whether you’ll be able to use the same medications and whether it will be just as effective.” |
| “One of the questions they always have also is when we stop this medicine which I think is harder to answer because I think we’re better in medicine, at starting medicines than stopping…” | |
| Health System Challenges | “I think expenses are a big [challenge], how costly the medication is.” |
| “…and trying to understand what would work best on them from a treatment standpoint as far as administering the medication, what their insurance may or may not pay for…” |