| Literature DB >> 32376751 |
Sara Shaw1, Gemma Hughes2, Tim Stephens3, Rupert Pearse4, John Prowle4, Richard Edmund Ashcroft5, Ester Avagliano6, James Day7, Mark Edsell6, Jennifer Edwards8, Leslie Everest9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Surgical treatments are being offered to more patients than ever before, and increasingly to high-risk patients (typically multimorbid and over 75). Shared decision making is seen as essential practice. However, little is currently known about what 'good' shared decision making involves nor how it applies in the context of surgery for high-risk patients. This new study aims to identify how high-risk patients, their families and clinical teams negotiate decision making for major surgery. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Focusing on major joint replacement, colorectal and cardiac surgery, we use qualitative methods to explore how patients, their families and clinicians negotiate decision making (including interactional, communicative and informational aspects and the extent to which these are perceived as shared) and reflect back on the decisions they made. Phase 1 involves video recording 15 decision making encounters about major surgery between patients, their carers/families and clinicians; followed by up to 90 interviews (with the same patient, carer and clinician participants) immediately after a decision has been made and again 3-6 months later. Phase 2 involves focus groups with a wider group of (up to 90) patients and (up to 30) clinicians to test out emerging findings and inform development of shared decision making scenarios (3-5 summary descriptions of how decisions are made). ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study forms the first part in a 6-year programme of research, Optimising Shared decision-makIng for high-RIsk major Surgery (OSIRIS). Ethical challenges around involving patients at a challenging time in their lives will be overseen by the programme steering committee, which includes strong patient representation and a lay chair. In addition to academic outputs, we will produce a typology of decision making scenarios for major surgery to feed back to patients, professionals and service providers and inform subsequent work in the OSIRIS programme. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: adult surgery; communication; high risk; qualitative research; shared decision making
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32376751 PMCID: PMC7223149 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Overview of data structure and planned analysis
| Data source | Data collected | First order interpretations | Higher-order interpretations |
| Case studies of decision making for surgery | Video recordings of 15 consultations across three different surgical areas Researcher field notes, including clinical pathways | Key exchanges shaping decision making about surgery between clinicians, patients (and potentially carers/family members) Unfolding interaction, and use of decision-making aids/tools Clinic workflows, ‘decision points’ for surgery and key interdependencies | How patients, clinicians and carers relate; and how/when they come together to discuss—and make decisions about—surgery ‘Scripts’ held by patients/clinicians about how they should behave and interact When a meaningful decision about surgery is made, by whom and how Organisational and clinic context to decision making |
| Preoperative narratives about decision making about surgery | Follow-up interviews (up to 45) with the same 15 consulting patients and their clinicians and, where relevant, carer/family member other members of the clinical team (eg, anaesthetists, specialist nurses) involved in shaping decisions about surgery | Reflections on decisions made about surgery Perceptions on the decision making process over time, including strategies for communication and sharing information Experiences of decision making, and expectations going forward Key organisational and clinic strategies, and how these change over time How participants felt | Internal social structures (what actors ‘know’, how they understand and interpret about surgery, including what ‘a decision’ about surgery means to actors ‘Scripts’ held about decision making and how they change over time, including assumptions about: Capability of users How people interact Consent Clinical work and routines How these all interact |
| Post hoc reflections on decision making about surgery | Follow-up interviews (up to 45) with the same 15 consulting patients and their clinicians and, where relevant, carer/family member Focus group interviews with (up to 90) patients/carers and (up to 30) clinicians |
Anticipated outputs and impact
| Planned outputs | Anticipated impact | |
| 15 detailed vignettes of decision making for high-risk surgery | Increased understanding (within and beyond OSIRIS) of the process of decision making. | |
| Typology of decision-making scenarios | Inform codesign, with patients and doctors, of a decision support intervention to be tested in a clinical trial |
OSIRIS, Optimising Shared decision-makIng for high-RIsk major Surgery.