| Literature DB >> 34938082 |
Elizabeth A Fradgley1,2, Kate Booth1, Christine Paul1,2, Nicholas Zdenkowski1, Nicole M Rankin3.
Abstract
AIM: Multidisciplinary team meetings (MDMs) are a critical element of quality care for people diagnosed with cancer. The MDM Chairperson plays a significant role in facilitating these meetings, which are often time-poor environments for clinical decision making. This study examines the perceptions of MDM Chairpersons including their role and the factors that determine the quality of a Chair, as well as the Chairperson's perception of the value of personally attending meetings.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; clinical leadership; multidisciplinary care; oncology; quality outcomes
Year: 2021 PMID: 34938082 PMCID: PMC8687680 DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S332972
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Multidiscip Healthc ISSN: 1178-2390
Quotations About the Theme: The Efficiency and Traits of an Ideal Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) Chairperson
| Participant Number | Indicative Quotation |
|---|---|
| 10 | “You have to be diplomatic; you have to be able to quell a noisy crowd. You have to be across the cases, you have to really construe the narrative because it can go off on a tangent …. You have to get on with everybody; you have to subtly discipline a meeting. You have to know as much as everybody in the room about the case. You have to listen and … delegate effectively. So, you cannot scribe, you cannot take the minutes, you cannot interpret results. … You have to be the orchestra conductor.” |
| 6 | “Well, knowledgeable, some humility and a good listener … |
| 2 | “So, going around and asking the key people their opinions to make sure those that may be a bit afraid to speak up feel that their opinion is valued. And giving them the chance and making sure everybody else is quiet so they can be heard.” |
| 7 | “Ideally, it would be someone who the whole group certainly respects and who is also able to elate [sic] some discussion sometimes, because on paper it seems like everyone can follow the step-by-step rules of what the recommendations are, each group gives their opinion on what the management should be for their patient.” |
| 8 | “I think someone who has good, level communication skills, … who has good relationships with all the different specialties, and somebody who is organised and has a broad knowledge of management of the conditions which they are discussing, not just in their own speciality.” |
| 2 | “The problems I’ve seen have been about time. So, often you’ve got an hour, there’s a lot of patients. And it’s very easy for discussion to go off track. And so I think trying to rein that back in and cut people off and bring them back to the point.” |
| 10 | “You’ve got to be conscious of time and you have to finish on time. That’s so important because meetings that run over just drive everybody crazy.” |
Quotations About the Theme: Combined Expertise and Consensus
| Participant Number | Indicative Quotation |
|---|---|
| 4 | “ … It’s the sharing of expertise between various subspecialists. It’s the expertise that each person brings to the meeting.” |
| 5 | “The patients we say should be discussed would be stage two to three [tumour type] cancer because those are the ones who likely need multimodality treatment … We have also got some general category patients who need help with diagnosis. In that way, we are discussing the best way to get a diagnosis if it’s not straightforward.” |
| 9 | “There’s a very obvious and clear benefit in planning patient care, and it’s particularly relevant in our cancers where they need multi-modality treatment … to have all of the relevant clinicians in the room and examining the investigations is really, extremely useful.” |
| 3 | “Well, I think the big factor is someone that’s not too vocal in their opinions. Because I find the MDTs I have been at where we have had bad outcomes are where you get one or two vocal people and they can sway the whole room by their personality. I think a good chair takes into account all the opinions and opens the floor up. But at the same time, keeps the meeting moving along, so that’s actually quite a skill, I think, to be able to do that.” |
Quotations About the Theme: Consensus and Accountability on Consistent Care
| Participant Number | Indicative Quotation |
|---|---|
| 16 | “Often it will involve chatting to three or four different people who you cannot get in the one place, and it’s really difficult to get some kind of consensus, whereas for the complex cases, it’s a really valuable venue for I guess discussing the controversies and coming to some kind of consensus position.” |
| 13 | “I think that for complex patients, it’s important that every clinician looking after that patient sings from the same song sheet, that there’s no confusion.” |
| 5 | “I think the [tumour type] MDT is crucial in determining a comprehensive treatment plan for [tumour type] cancer patients because … many people are treated with multiple modalities of treatment … our patients often have significant comorbidities which need to be accounted for in determining that management plan.” |
| 2 | “I think it’s also good to ensure that you do not just have one person doing their own thing unchecked. It’s good that as a group we can make sure that the management is appropriate. |
| 6 | “I think MDMs have restricted the diversity of treatment protocols that are used … I think people come with preconceived notions, and sometimes their ideas are changed when they come to that meeting. And that’s why we are there. So, we learn from each other. We change sometimes our fixed opinions.” |
| 1 | “The important ingredient is collegiality, really, and developing a team that is prepared to advise by evidence-based medicine, where the evidence exist. If you get people who are wanting to push their own barrows, for example, radiation or chemotherapy or surgery, and it’s not based on evidence, well, then, of course, it will not work well.” |
| 13 | “if you go against what the MDT have recommended, you’re seen as an outlier.” |
| 6 | “I attend for various reasons. One, is the patient care, so gaining consensus around treatment of patients with various conditions.” |
| 7 | “It will simply get documented in the MDT letter and in the MDT notes that consensus was unable to be reached. And that these are the options that were discussed and that will obviously get sent out to the GP and the referring doctor. The clinicians themselves, it’s up to them whether they want to document that in the patient’s electronic file.” |
| 16 | “I do not have any hard and fast rules, but I think if the discussion is not progressing after three or four minutes, then I think that’s the point where I would suggest, well, is there a consensus? No, there’s not, so we are going to document it as such. |
| 10 | “I make a huge effort to get consensus around our recommendations in our meeting. So, I actually … We have our database on screen and I actually make a point of saying these will be the recorded recommendations.” |
| 15 | “It’s followed virtually 100% locally, but some patients, I’m talking maybe 5% end up at other treatment centres, tertiary centres, and they will do something different to what we’ve recommended, yes.” |
| 2 | “The majority do so we’d probably be looking at probably maybe 80% I would say you do end up following what was discussed. But then there’d be the other 20% where the patient may not agree with what the plan was or may not be fit enough for that plan.” |
Quotations About the Theme: Relationships and Relationship Building
| Participant Number | Indicative Quotation |
|---|---|
| 14 | “Yes, so I guess you get the best patient care, and it does help communicate with the rest of the team the treatment plan so we’re all in agreement.” |
| 12 | “and it’s good for general communication, I think, between all the team members. I think that in the end, [meetings] results in better patient care.” |
| 7 | “It also provides a good opportunity to have the face-to-face interactions with the surgeons who are often our referral base and it can facilitate communication with them. It’s often easier to do face to face than playing phone tag or through email.” |
| 7 | “it’s also a good forum for … updating best practice or changes in management. So, for example, I might not necessarily be completely up to speed with new changes in systemic therapy management or new drugs, but it may come out in a MDT discussion that there is this big update at a medical oncology conference and there’s a shift in the treatment paradigm for this particular stage of cancer.” |
Quotations About the Theme: Patient Communication
| Participant Number | Indicative Quotation |
|---|---|
| 11 | “You give the patient a lot of reassurance when you say to them, a group of doctors have sat down and reviewed this. And then they in turn give me reassurance. So, I think it helps to develop really positive working relationships with the patient. And it can expedite things for patients. So, instead of them having to go sequentially to see different consultants to get opinions we can usually get a combined opinion at the time.” |
| 8 | “I think they make a difference in the sense that patients take a lot of comfort in knowing that their case is being discussed in a forum with other specialists and so they know the decisions being made are not just from one individual.” |
| 6 | “I think, the only other risk is the patient doesn’t hear second and third opinions directly. They’re getting a consensus view from a group of doctors, so they don’t directly hear the discussed conversation, and the second and third opinions.” |
| 11 | “I suppose there’s that fine line between open disclosure and having the patient fully informed. And working to not break the patient’s or medically impact the patients’ confidence in their overall management. If it was a very minor issue and really of no clinical concern … I probably would not discuss it. But if it was a major issue then I would have to discuss that. … But being able to present the different opinions of different people to the patient can sometimes help to clarify things for them.” |
| 13 | “I cannot see the point in wasting time [referring every patient] … I do believe that we do overall harm patients by discussing those cases that for which there’s no evidence that discussion benefits.” |
| 5 | “No, we do not … sometimes we actually discuss patients before we see them. If I see someone that I am going to discuss, I will tell them that they are going to be discussed. And as long as we have got enough information from either a discharge summary or referral letter and some imaging, normally we can discuss. And then we will tell them afterwards, by the way, we discussed your case at the MDT and this is what was recommended. But we do not have any formal process for consent.” |
| 6 | “We have no document … So, we have electronic case records, but we do not have formal consent. Sometimes I write in the notes for MDM, and I have mentioned it to the patient, but it’s not formal consent” |