scholarly journals Using CollaboRATE, a brief patient-reported measure of shared decision making: Results from three clinical settings in the United States

2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 82-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachel C. Forcino ◽  
Paul J. Barr ◽  
A. James O'Malley ◽  
Roger Arend ◽  
Molly G. Castaldo ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alysha Taxter ◽  
Lisa Johnson ◽  
Doreen Tabussi ◽  
Yukiko Kimura ◽  
Brittany Donaldson ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Coproduction of care involves patients and families partnering with their clinicians and care teams, with the premise that each brings their own perspective, knowledge, and expertise, as well as their own values, goals, and preferences to the partnership. Dashboards can display meaningful patient and clinical data to assess how a patient is doing and inform shared decision making. Increasing communication between patients and care teams is particularly important for children with chronic conditions, such as juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), which is the most common, chronic rheumatic condition of childhood, and is associated with increased pain, decreased function, and decreased quality of life. OBJECTIVE We aimed to design a dashboard prototype for use in coproducing care for JIA patients. We evaluated the context use and needs of end users, obtained consensus on the necessary dashboard data elements, and constructed display prototypes to inform meaningful discussions for coproduction. METHODS A human-centered design approach involving parents, patients, clinicians, and care team members was used to develop a dashboard to support coproduction of care in four diverse ambulatory pediatric rheumatology clinics across the United States. We engaged a multidisciplinary team (n=18) of patients/parents, clinicians, nurses, and staff during an in-person kick-off meeting, followed by bi-weekly meetings. We also leveraged advisory panels. Teams mapped workflows and patient journeys, created personas, and developed dashboard sketches. Final necessary dashboard components were determined using Delphi consensus voting. Low-tech dashboard testing was completed during clinic visits, and visual display prototypes were iterated using PDSA methodology. Patients and providers were surveyed about their experiences. RESULTS Teams achieved consensus on what data matters most at point-of-care to support JIA patients, families, and clinicians partnering together to make the best possible decisions for better health. Notable themes included: the right data, in the right place, at the right time; data in once for multiple purposes; patient and family self-management components; and opportunity for education and increased transparency. A final set of 11 dashboard data elements were identified which include patient-reported outcomes, clinical data, and medications. Important design considerations include incorporation of real-time data, clearly labeled graphs, and vertical orientation to facilitate review and discussion. Prototype paper testing with 36 patients/families yielded positive feedback about the dashboard’s usefulness during clinic discussions, helped to talk about what mattered most, and informed healthcare decision making. CONCLUSIONS Our study developed a dashboard prototype that displays patient-reported and clinical data over time, along with medications, that can be used during a clinic visit to support meaningful conversations and shared decision making between JIA patients/families and their clinicians and care teams. CLINICALTRIAL N/A


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yaara Zisman-Ilani ◽  
Rana Obeidat ◽  
Lauren Fang ◽  
Sarah Hsieh ◽  
Zackary Berger

BACKGROUND Shared decision making (SDM) is a health communication model that evolved in Europe and North America and largely reflects the values and medical practices dominant in these areas. OBJECTIVE This study aims to understand the beliefs, perceptions, and practices related to SDM and patient-centered care (PCC) of physicians in Israel, Jordan, and the United States. METHODS A hypothesis-generating comparative survey study was administered to physicians from Israel, Jordan, and the United States. RESULTS A total of 36 surveys were collected via snowball sampling (Jordan: n=15; United States: n=12; Israel: n=9). SDM was perceived as a way to inform patients and allow them to participate in their care. Barriers to implementing SDM varied based on place of origin; physicians in the United States mentioned limited time, physicians in Jordan reported that a lack of patient education limits SDM practices, and physicians in Israel reported lack of communication training. Most US physicians defined PCC as a practice for prioritizing patient preferences, whereas both Jordanian and Israeli physicians defined PCC as a holistic approach to care and to prioritizing patient needs. Barriers to implementing PCC, as seen by US physicians, were mostly centered on limited appointment time and insurance coverage. In Jordan and Israel, staff shortage and a lack of resources in the system were seen as major barriers to PCC implementation. CONCLUSIONS The study adds to the limited, yet important, literature on SDM and PCC in areas of the world outside the United States, Canada, Australia, and Western Europe. The study suggests that perceptions of PCC might widely differ among these regions, whereas concepts of SDM might be shared. Future work should clarify these differences.


2018 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrike Schaede ◽  
Jörg Mahlich ◽  
Masahiko Nakayama ◽  
Hisanori Kobayashi ◽  
Yuriko Takahashi ◽  
...  

This article adds the Japanese perspective to our knowledge of shared decision-making (SDM) preferences by surveying patients with prostate cancer (PCA) and physicians in Japan. In 2015, 103 Japanese patients with PCA were asked about their SDM preferences by using an Internet-based 5-point-scale questionnaire. Concurrently, 127 Japanese physicians were surveyed regarding their perceptions of patient preferences on SDM. Drivers of preferences and perceptions were analyzed using univariable ordinal logistic regression and graphing the fitted response probabilities. Although 41% of both patients and physicians expressed and expected a desire for active involvement in treatment decisions (a higher rate than in a similar study for the United States in 2001), almost half the Japanese patients preferred SDM, but only 33% of physicians assumed this was their choice. That is, 29% of Japanese physicians underestimated patients’ preference for involvement in making treatment decisions. Patients with lower health-related quality of life (as measured by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Prostate [FACT-P]) expressed a stronger preference for SDM. The study shows that the worse the medical situation, the more patients with PCA prefer to be involved in the treatment decision, yet physicians tend to underestimate the preferences of their patients. Perhaps in contrast to common assumptions, Japanese patients are as interested in being involved in decision making as are patients in the United States.


2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
OJ Oh ◽  
KS Lee ◽  
J Miller ◽  
M Hammash ◽  
DR Thompson ◽  
...  

Abstract Funding Acknowledgements Type of funding sources: Public Institution(s). Main funding source(s): In Australia, this study received funding from a faculty grand by Australian University Faculty of Health Sciences Research grant. In the United States, the study was funded by a research professor award from University of Kentucky. Background. Shared decision-making is important for ICD recipients to fully contemplate and rationally decide about ICD deactivation at end-of-life. Although discussions about device deactivation at end-of-life are recommended to be held before ICD implantation and throughout the illness trajectory, such discussions rarely occur in clinical practice. Purpose. To identify whether ICD recipients’ experiences of end-of-life discussions with clinicians are associated with openness to discussing ICD deactivation at end-of-life. Methods. This cross-sectional study included 293 ICD recipients living in the United States, Australia, and South Korea (mean age 59, 22.5% female, mean ICD implantation 10 years). Hierarchical logistic regression was used to determine whether patients’ experiences of shared decision-making were associated with openness to discuss device deactivation at end-of-life after controlling for relevant covariates (i.e. age, gender, ICD implantation years, ICD shock experience, general ICD experience, ICD knowledge, and concerns related to the ICD). Results. About half of the participants (57.7%) were open to discussing ICD deactivation at end-of-life with clinicians. Almost one-quarter (23.5%) had no prior experience of discussing any end-of-life issues with clinicians. Patients’ past experiences of end-of-life discussions with clinicians were significantly associated with openness to discuss device deactivation at end-of-life (OR: 1.30) after adjusting for covariates. Conclusion. Our results highlight that clinicians’ willingness to discuss sensitive end-of-life issues such as battery replacement and deactivation of defibrillation therapy empowers patients to actively engage in end-of-life discussions.


2021 ◽  
pp. 27-36
Author(s):  
Mark Siegler

In 1982, the concept of physician-patient accommodation was renamed shared decision making by the President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine. Since then, shared decision making has replaced thousands of years of paternalistic physician-controlled medicine and has emerged as the prevailing model of the doctor-patient relationship in the United States. The President’s Commission’s perspective was closely based on the development of clinical medical ethics (CME) in the early 1970s. CME addresses clinical issues such as truth telling, informed consent, confidentiality, and end-of-life care, and must be practiced by licensed clinicians in their routine, daily encounters with more than 40 million inpatients and about 1.5 billion outpatients in the United States each year. The central goal of CME is to improve the quality of patient care by identifying and contributing to the resolution of ethical problems in the practice of clinical medicine; this goal is frequently achieved by shared decision making.


Author(s):  
Dominick L. Frosch ◽  
Benjamin W. Moulton ◽  
Richard M. Wexler ◽  
Margaret Holmes-Rovner ◽  
Robert J. Volk ◽  
...  

10.2196/18223 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (8) ◽  
pp. e18223
Author(s):  
Yaara Zisman-Ilani ◽  
Rana Obeidat ◽  
Lauren Fang ◽  
Sarah Hsieh ◽  
Zackary Berger

Background Shared decision making (SDM) is a health communication model that evolved in Europe and North America and largely reflects the values and medical practices dominant in these areas. Objective This study aims to understand the beliefs, perceptions, and practices related to SDM and patient-centered care (PCC) of physicians in Israel, Jordan, and the United States. Methods A hypothesis-generating comparative survey study was administered to physicians from Israel, Jordan, and the United States. Results A total of 36 surveys were collected via snowball sampling (Jordan: n=15; United States: n=12; Israel: n=9). SDM was perceived as a way to inform patients and allow them to participate in their care. Barriers to implementing SDM varied based on place of origin; physicians in the United States mentioned limited time, physicians in Jordan reported that a lack of patient education limits SDM practices, and physicians in Israel reported lack of communication training. Most US physicians defined PCC as a practice for prioritizing patient preferences, whereas both Jordanian and Israeli physicians defined PCC as a holistic approach to care and to prioritizing patient needs. Barriers to implementing PCC, as seen by US physicians, were mostly centered on limited appointment time and insurance coverage. In Jordan and Israel, staff shortage and a lack of resources in the system were seen as major barriers to PCC implementation. Conclusions The study adds to the limited, yet important, literature on SDM and PCC in areas of the world outside the United States, Canada, Australia, and Western Europe. The study suggests that perceptions of PCC might widely differ among these regions, whereas concepts of SDM might be shared. Future work should clarify these differences.


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