| Literature DB >> 26480942 |
Lisa M Parker1, Lucie Rychetnik2, Stacy M Carter3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One well-accepted strategy for optimising outcomes in mammographic breast cancer screening is to improve communication with women about screening. It is not always clear, however, what it is that communication should be expected to achieve, and why or how this is so. We investigated Australian experts' opinions on breast screening communication. Our research questions were: 1 What are the views of Australian experts about communicating with consumers on breast screening? 2 How do experts reason about this topic?Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26480942 PMCID: PMC4617891 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-015-1749-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Characteristics of experts
| Participants 33 (Experts who were invited but did not-participate 13) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Professional rolea | Cliniciansb15 (3) | Oncologists 3 (1) |
| Surgeons 4 (0) | ||
| Breast physicians 1 (2) | ||
| Radiologists 2 (0) | ||
| Radiation oncologists 2 (0) | ||
| Pathologists 3 (0) | ||
| Other 0 (1) | ||
| Non-clinical researchers 14 (3) | Epidemiologists/biostatisticians 9 (1) | |
| Other 5 (1) | ||
| Administrators/managers 6 (2) | 6 (2) | |
| Advocacy leaders 6 (7) | Consumers working in advocacy 3 (6) | |
| Clinicians/researchers working in advocacy 3 (1) | ||
| Public stance on breast screeningc | Supportive 16 (9) | |
| Mostly supportived 3 (1) | ||
| Critical 6 (0) | ||
| Unknown to researchers 8 (3) | ||
anote that some experts held more than one professional role, for this reason the numbers attached to specific professional roles do not neatly add up to n = 33 (participants) or n = 13 (experts invited but not participating)
bmost clinicians engaged in research to a greater or lesser extent
cWe loosely categorised potential interviewees as being “supportive”, “mostly supportive” or “critical” about breast screening based on publicly available commentary
dbroadly supportive of breast screening but with selected concerns about one or more elements of the program
Experts’ preferences regarding guidance and information when communicating with women about breast cancer screening
| Guidancea | No guidanceb | |
|---|---|---|
| Limited informationc |
|
|
| Full informationd |
|
|
aGuidance: Experts who preferred guiding women to screen advocated for the following:
• Provider-to-consumer guidance to screen via public promotional advertising & personalised letters of invitation to women from the screening program
• Marketing support & participation targets for local breast screening units to ensure guidance is effective at maintaining high participation
• Educational support & electronic reminders to enhance GP-to-consumer guidance to screen
bNo guidance: Experts who preferred not to guide women’s screening choices advocated for the following:
• An independent body to provide information to women about screening options & encourage them to make a thoughtful choice about participation
• Online decision aid tools available to consumers
• No personalised invitations
• Targets for consumer understanding rather than participation
• Educational support to enhance GP assistance for women to make an informed screening choice
• Directed advice available from GP upon request
cLimited information: Experts who preferred limiting the overdiagnosis information presented to women advocated for the following content in consumer communications:
• Information that breast screening saves lives
• Information that a recall does not necessarily mean you have cancer
• Brief mention that overdiagnosis is a possibility and that it is unlikely
• Advising that further information is available to women upon request
dFull information: Experts who preferred providing full information to women advocated for the following content in consumer communications:
• Detailed information about mortality benefit, false positives & overdiagnosis associated with breast screening
• Numerical / pictorial comparison of chances of deriving benefit & being overdiagnosed
eThere were roughly equal numbers of experts supporting each of the three named approaches
Experts’ rationales for their stance on guidance and information provision to women regarding breast screening
| Guiding women towards breast screening |
|---|
| FOR |
| ● Maximises screening participationa |
| ● Saves livesa |
| ● Women will have more treatment optionsa |
| ● Overall, screening delivers more benefits than harms to the populationa |
| ● Overdiagnosis is not a harm |
| ● Providing guidance about good health is a government public health responsibility |
| ● You don’t want people to make decisions in public health, you just want them to follow advice |
| ● Expecting consumers to make their own informed choice is unfair and unrealistic because the evidence is so complicated |
| ● (Some) people want to be told what to do |
| AGAINST |
| ● Individuals should be free to make their own decisionsa |
| ● Personal autonomy is importanta |
| ● Harm:benefit ratio is equivocal so screening should be an individual choice, not a government-promoted activitya |
| ● Screening affects only the individual concerned, so there is no community-benefit argument to justify promotion of screening |
| ● Others may not have the best interests of the individual consumer at heart |
| ● Consumers tend to be better than policy makers at remembering to consider screening harms as well as benefits, so judgements about screening should be left to consumers |
| ● The harms of breast screening are greater than the benefits |
|
|
| FOR |
| ● Maximises screening participationa |
| ● Calling overdiagnosis a “harm” is just one (mis)interpretation of the facts |
| ● Women don’t consider overdiagnosis a harm; main harms that women care about are: pain, hassles of parking and making appointments, radiation, breast damage, anxiety about recalls |
| ● Population based information on overdiagnosis is not applicable to individuals |
| ● The real problem is not overdiagnosis but overtreatment |
| AGAINST |
| ● People should know what they are signing up for when they participate in screeninga |
| ● Providing information enables informed decision makinga |
| ● Informed decision making is particularly important for breast screening because there are some downsidesa |
| ● Providing full information is a professional responsibility |
| ● (Some) women want full information |
avery strongly/frequently expressed reasons
Experts’ conceptualisation and prioritisation of values in three approaches to communication with consumers
| Values | Conception of values underpinning the “Be screened” approach | Conception of values underpinning the “Be screened and here’s why” approach | Conception of values underpinning the “Screening is available, please consider whether it is right for you” approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delivering benefits | Reduced breast cancer mortality & reduced treatment related morbiditya | Reduced breast cancer mortality & reduced treatment related morbiditya | Reduced all cause mortality and morbidity |
| Avoiding harm | Minimising pain, parking hassles, radiation, anxiety about false positives | Minimising pain, parking hassles, radiation, anxiety about false positives | Minimising overdiagnosis harmsa |
| Delivering more benefits than harms | Experts informed by evidence to assess population benefits & harmsa | Experts informed by evidence to assess population benefits & harmsa | Consumers informed by evidence and personal values to assess balance of benefits & harms for themselvesa |
| Respect for autonomy | Maximising consumer choices for life saving breast cancer treatment; freedom from misleading influences on consumer screening participation | Maximising consumer choices for life saving breast cancer treatment | Facilitating informed consumer decision making about screening, freedom from external (positive or negative) influences on decision makinga |
| Transparency | n/a | Telling consumers what might happen when participating in screeninga | Telling consumers what might happen when participating in screening |
| Professional responsibility | Providing guidance on healthy living to the population | Providing guidance on healthy living to the population | Providing full information to the population about healthy living |
| Respect for public preferences regarding decision-making responsibility | Consumers want to be told what to do | Consumers want to be told what to do; consumers want full information | Consumers want full information |
avalues that were prioritised for this particular communication approach