| Literature DB >> 32646422 |
W Savelberg1,2, M Smidt3, L J Boersma3,4, T van der Weijden5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is known that the use of a Patient Decision Aid (PtDA), combined with advice for professionals on how and when to use it, can enhance the involvement of patients in the treatment decision. However, we need more knowledge with respect to the intention-behaviour gap. This study aims to analyse patients' experiences with the Shared Decision Making (SDM) process to find clues to close this gap.Entities:
Keywords: Early stage breast cancer; Implementation; Patient decision aid; Patient experiences; Shared decision making
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32646422 PMCID: PMC7346491 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05476-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Results of the quantitative survey data in five hospitals
| Total | ||
|---|---|---|
| Patients interviewed ( | Mother sample ( | |
| ✓ SDM-Q9 Mean (SD) | 87.4 (11.2) | 86.3 (12.2) |
| ✓ CollaboRATE Mean (SD) | 8.2 (0.5) | 8.3 (0.6) |
| ✓ Knowledge Mean (SD) | 65% (14.1) | 61% (15) |
| ✓ Decisional conflict Mean (SD) | 31.6 (10.8) | 28.1 (11.4) |
SDM-Q9: range 0–100, whereby 0 indicates the lowest possible level of SDM and 100 indicates the highest possible level of SDM [28].
CollaboRATE: Top score = percentage of the patients responding 9 to all three items. Higher scores represent more shared decision-making [29].
Knowledge ranges from 0 to 100% depending on the number of correct answers.
Fig. 1overview of the sample selection
Patient characteristics
| Patients | Hospital | Surgical treatment at time of interview | Age | Level of education | Logged in PtDA | Interview length in minutes | DCSa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient 1 | 1 | Mastectomy | 44 | High | Yes | 32 | 10.9 |
| Patient 2 | 2 | Lumpectomy | 58 | Inter-mediate | No | 31 | 28.1 |
| Patient 3 | 2 | Lumpectomy | 50 | Low | Yes | 54 | c |
| Patient 4 | 1 | Lumpectomy | 55 | High | Yes | 41 | 31.3 |
| Patient 5 | 1 | Depending on chemo response | 48 | Inter-mediate | No | 34 | c |
| Patient 6 | 1 | Mastectomy | 56 | Inter-mediate | No | 47 | 29.7 |
| Patient 7 | 1 | Lumpectomy | 59 | High | Yes | 46 | c |
| Patient 8 | 3 | Lumpectomy Mastectomy | 44 | Inter-mediate | No | 46 | c |
| Patient 9 | 2 | Lumpectomy | 44 | Inter-mediate | Yes | 11 | 26.6 |
| Patient 10 | 2 | Lumpectomy | 61 | High | Yes | 29 | 12.5 |
| Patient 11 | 1 | Lumpectomy | 51 | Low | No | 32 | 26.6 |
| Patient 12 | 5 | Mastectomy | 46 | Inter-mediate | Yes | 13 | c |
| Patient 13 | 5 | Mastectomy | 61 | High | Yes | 53 | c |
| Patient 14 | 4 | Lumpectomy | 66 | Low | No | 11 | 15.6 |
| Patient 15 | 5 | Lumpectomy | 51 | Low | No | 16 | 32.8 |
| Patient 16 | 5 | Lumpectomy | 68 | High | Yes | 35 | c |
| Patient 17 | 4 | Lumpectomy | 51 | High | Yes | 45 | 9.8 |
| Patient 18 | 4 | Lumpectomy | 51 | High | Yes | 27 | 45.3 |
| Patient 19 | 4 | Lumpectomy | 50 | Inter-mediate | Yes | 57: | 26.6 |
| Patient 20 | 4 | Lumpectomy | 53 | High | Yes | 28 | 26.6 |
aDCS Decisional conflict scale bTotal score 1–100 cMissing