| Literature DB >> 26364752 |
Heather L Shepherd1, Alexandra Barratt2, Anna Jones2, Deborah Bateson3,4, Karen Carey5, Lyndal J Trevena2, Kevin McGeechan2, Chris B Del Mar6, Phyllis N Butow2, Ronald M Epstein7, Vikki Entwistle8, Edith Weisberg3,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To test the feasibility and assess the uptake and acceptability of implementing a consumer questions programme, AskShareKnow, to encourage consumers to use the questions '1. What are my options; 2. What are the possible benefits and harms of those options; 3. How likely are each of those benefits and harms to happen to me?' These three questions have previously shown important effects in improving the quality of information provided during consultations and in facilitating patient involvement.Entities:
Keywords: communication; consumer; patient empowerment; patient involvement; shared decision making
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26364752 PMCID: PMC5152736 DOI: 10.1111/hex.12409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Expect ISSN: 1369-6513 Impact factor: 3.377
Figure 1Recruitment flow.
Baseline characteristics of study sample (n = 121)
|
| % | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | ||
| 20–39 years | 70 | 58 |
| 40–59 years | 43 | 36 |
| >60 years | 7 | 6 |
| Marital status | ||
| Single/never Married | 42 | 35 |
| Married/de facto | 68 | 56 |
| Separated/divorced | 11 | 9 |
| Born in Australia | 88 | 73 |
| Education achievement | ||
| Year 10 (16 years) | 7 | 6 |
| Year 12/HSC (18 years) | 11 | 9 |
| TAFE (Technical College) | 30 | 25 |
| University | 73 | 60 |
| Involvement preferences | ||
| The doctor should make the decisions using all that's known about the treatments | 2 | 2 |
| The doctor should make the decisions but strongly consider my needs and priorities | 18 | 15 |
| The doctor and I should make the decisions together on an equal basis | 46 | 38 |
| I should make the decisions, but strongly consider the doctor's opinion | 49 | 40 |
| I should make the decisions using all I know or learn about the treatments | 6 | 5 |
| Information preferences | ||
| Prefer as many details as possible | 81 | 68 |
| I want only information needed to care for myself properly | 15 | 13 |
| I want additional information only if it is good news | 0 | 0 |
| I want as much information as possible, good and bad | 104 | 87 |
ASK questions asked in consultation
| No. of Questions asked | Was a decision made? | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Yes | No | |
|
|
| ||
| ≥ 1 question | 84 (69) | ||
| 3 questions | 35 (29) | 27 (43) | 8 (14) |
| 2 questions | 25 (21) | 18 (28) | 7 (12) |
| 1 question only | 24 (20) | 10 (16) | 14 (24) |
| None | 37 (31) | 8 (13) | 29 (50) |
Figure 2Number of times each question asked.
Question recall at 2 weeks
| Accurate recall |
|
|---|---|
| Question 1 What are my options? | 51 (82) |
| Question 2 What are the possible benefits and harms of those options? | 38 (61) |
| Question 3 How likely are each of those benefits and harms to happen to me? | 30 (48) |
| All 3 questions | 29 (47) |
| Would ask the questions again | 47 (83) |
| i. |
I think it just, as I said I didn't do it in the exact order, I used kind of my own version of it but it reminded me while I was in the waiting room I just kind of remembered that that would be useful. It is a good process to have in your head. So not totally different, I am sure that I would have got a lot of the information had I not asked them through conversation but it was definitely good for me to remember to kind of focus in on those points as well. |
| ii. |
Yes, look, I think the questions could be useful but possibly in a consultation with a GP or specialist when there might be more unknowns or some bigger decisions to be made. |
| iii. |
It's funny because going to the doctor isn't something that you are ever trained to do [..] having someone to go “ok, well you can ask these questions”, so you go in and you feel like you have more of a role in the whole thing. [..] And once you've been a few times then you can say, “oh well, I asked it this way last time and I got this sort of information, but now I can adapt that too, from my experience, to the rest of life” so yeah, it is nice to have someone say here's how you can go about getting more information. |
| iv. |
No it helped! It helped a lot. I definitely got more information. It was very positive. It made me realise that we don't ask questions enough and we don't ask about side effects [..]The information I got back when I asked the questions [..] I wouldn't have found that out if I hadn't asked. So it just made me want to question things more, to get clearer information about side effects and general questions. The doctor was very open to talking about things, and to give me the information I wanted [..] I walked out feeling really good. |
| v. |
it is always good to see a visual cue, to remind you of what's going on [..] I thought I understood the first time but it helped to sort of clarify it in my head [..] having that visual aide to help explain things |
| P – Patient | |
| HP – Health professional | |