| Literature DB >> 25280742 |
Anik M C Giguere, Michel Labrecque, R Brian Haynes, Roland Grad, Pierre Pluye, France Légaré, Michel Cauchon, Matthew Greenway, Pierre-Hugues Carmichael.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Decision boxes (Dboxes) provide clinicians with research evidence about management options for medical questions that have no single best answer. Dboxes fulfil a need for rapid clinical training tools to prepare clinicians for clinician-patient communication and shared decision-making. We studied the barriers and facilitators to using the Dbox information in clinical practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25280742 PMCID: PMC4201673 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-014-0144-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Health topic covered by each Dbox
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| 1 | Cholinesterase inhibitors to reduce the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease (ChEIs) |
| 2 | Acetylsalicylic acid for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (ASA) |
| 3 | Faecal occult blood test to screen for colorectal cancer (FOBT) |
| 4 | Serum integrated test to screen women for fetal trisomy 21 (Prenatal) |
| 5 | Statins for primary prevention of cardiovascular disease (Statins) |
| 6 | BRCA1/2 gene mutation test to evaluate the risks of breast and ovarian cancer (BRCA) |
| 7 | Bisphosphonates to prevent osteoporotic fractures in postmenopausal women (Osteo) |
| 8 | Prostate-specific antigen test to screen men for prostate cancer (PSA) |
Health topic covered by each Dbox, their abbreviated title, and their order of delivery.
Characteristics of the participating clinics and clinicians
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| Clinic (only C1 to C4 participated in the focus groups) | |||||
| Clinic 1 (C1) | Yes | 719,200 | 19 | 21 | 3 |
| Clinic 2 (C2) | Yes | 719,200 | 23 | 24 | 3 |
| Clinic 3 (C3) | No | 390,300 | 6 | 0 | 0 |
| Clinic 4 (C4) | Yes | 3,635,000 | 20 | 40 | 9 |
| Clinic 5 (C5) | No | 390,300 | 10 | 0 | 0 |
| Clinic 6 (C6) | Yes | 692,900 | 23 | 18 | 6 |
| Participating clinicians | |||||
| Web questionnaire | |||||
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| 60 | 30 | 11 | ||
| Mean age in years (SD) | 43 (10) | 30 (6) | 39 (9) | ||
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| 38 (63%) | 20 (67%) | 10 (91%) | ||
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| 31 (52%) | 9 (30%) | 6 (55%) | ||
| Mean years of practice (SD) | 16 (10) | 4 (6) | 17 (10) | ||
| Interviews and focus groups | |||||
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| 18 (3 clinic administrators) | 3 | 6 | ||
| Mean age in years (SD) | 42 (10) | 29 (6) | 37 (5) | ||
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| 10 (52%) | 2 (67%) | 6 (100%) | ||
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| 9 (47%) | 0 (0%) | 3 (50%) | ||
| Mean years of practice (SD) | 16 (11) | 5 (6) | 13 (7) | ||
Clinicians’ report of the value of decision boxes for practice: ratings based on the Information Assessment Method (IAM)
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| Cognitive impact of the information | |
| Their practice will be changed and improved | 54% (268/496) |
| Counselling approach | 76% (203/268) |
| Disease prevention or health education | 51% (137/268) |
| Therapeutic approach | 33% (87/268) |
| Diagnostic approach | 16% (43/268) |
| They learned something new | 52% (258/496) |
| They are motivated to learn more | 32% (157/496) |
| They were reminded of something they already knew | 23% (114/496) |
| They are reassured | 18% (88/496) |
| This information confirmed current practice | 13% (63/496) |
| There is a problem with the presentation of this information | 15% (76/496) |
| Poorly written | 25% (19/76) |
| Too technical | 25% (19/76) |
| Not enough information | 18% (14/76) |
| Too much information | 17% (13/76) |
| They are dissatisfied | 6% (30/496) |
| They disagree with the content of this information | 2% (10/496) |
| This information is potentially harmful | 1% (5/496) |
| Relevance | |
| The information is totally or partially relevant for at least one of their patients | 96% (472/489; 7 missing) |
| Information use (for participants who reported the information to be totally or partially relevant) | |
| They will use this information for a specific patient | 40% (190/472) |
| To discuss with patient or with other health professionals | 65% (123/190) |
| To change the way they manage a patient | 24% (45/190) |
| To justify a choice | 24% (45/190) |
| To be more certain about the management of a patient | 19% (37/190) |
| To better understand a particular issue related to a patient | 12% (23/190) |
| To persuade a patient or other health professionals to make a change | 8% (15/190) |
| To decide how to manage a patient | 8% (16/190) |
| Expected benefits of the information (for participants who reported that they will use this information for a specific patient) | |
| They expect patient health benefits as a result of applying this information | 89% (166/186; 4 missing) |
| Allows the patient to make a decision that is more in line with his/her personal circumstances, values, and preferences | 72% (120/166) |
| Helps to avoid unnecessary or inappropriate treatment, diagnostic procedures, preventive interventions, or a referral for this patient | 38% (63/166) |
| Helps reduce the patient’s uncertainty about the best decision to make | 28% (47/166) |
IAM is a checklist, and users are instructed to check all the items that apply (answers are not mutually exclusive).
Results of the generalized linear mixed modelling to evaluate the influence of independent factors (clinicians’ profession, Dbox clinical topic, clinical site, gender) on the explanatory variables of clinicians’ perception of the value of the Dbox for practice (satisfaction with regard to Dbox, IAM value of the information)
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| Smiley-face rating scale | ||||
| Satisfaction with regard to the Dbox | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| IAM | ||||
| Their practice will be changed and improved | ns. ( |
| n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| Are dissatisfied | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| Problem with the presentation of the information |
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| n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| Relevance | n.s. ( |
| n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| Information use | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
| Expected benefits | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( | n.s. ( |
n.s. not significant.
Figure 1Mean intention to use the decision box information in practice (+standard error), as measured using the theory of planned behaviour [ 40 ] for each of the eight Dboxes. See Table 5 for statistical significant differences across Dboxes. For list of abbreviations, please see Table 1.
values of the significance of the differences in the intention to use the decision box information in practice among Dbox topics (n.s. = > 0.05)
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| PSA | |||||||
| ASA | n.s. | ||||||
| OSTEO | 0.02 | n.s. | |||||
| BRCA | 0.03 | n.s. | n.s. | ||||
| Statins | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | |||
| Prenatal | n.s. | 0.03 | 0.0005 | 0.0006 | 0.02 | ||
| FOBT | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | 0.002 | |
| ChEIs | n.s. | n.s. | 0.007 | n.s. | n.s. | n.s. | 0.02 |
For list of abbreviations, please see Table 1.
Figure 2Logic model of the tailored decision box approach combining clinician and patient versions of the decision box, with the mechanisms by which it supports shared decision-making (SDM).