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An evaluation of two interventions to enhance patient-physician communication using the observer OPTION5 measure of shared decision making.

Description

Dillon EC, Stults CD, Wilson C, Chuang J, Meehan A, Li M, Elwyn G, Frosch DL, Yu E, Tai-Seale M., Patient Educ Couns. pii: S0738-3991(17)30254-9. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2017.04.020. [Epub ahead of print], 2017 May 01

Investigators

Cheryl Stults, Ph.D., Assistant Scientist

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Evaluate interventions to enhance patient-physician communication and shared decision making (SDM).

METHODS: We used Observer OPTION5 to evaluate primary care visits within a cluster randomized controlled trial in a California delivery organization. Trial interventions included Open Communication (OpenComm), combining patient activation and physician coaching, and AskShareKnow, a patient activation tool, and were compared to a usual care arm. Scores were analyzed with descriptive statistics and generalized estimating equation analysis for 40 visits containing 200 decision topics.

RESULTS: The mean overall OPTION5 score was 26.5 out of 100 (s.d.=15.2). Compared to visits in the usual care arm, OpenComm visits had higher mean item scores (0-4 scale) for eliciting (mean=1.0 vs 0.8) and integrating patient preferences (mean=1.0 vs 0.8). OpenComm and AskShareKnow visits had higher scores for presenting options (mean=1.5, 1.5 vs 1.3). AskShareKnow visits had higher scores for discussing pros/cons (mean=1.5 vs 1.1). Lower patient education attainment was associated with lower scores.

CONCLUSIONS: OpenComm and AskShareKnow were associated with improved SDM relative to usual care.

PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Results suggest targeting patient and physician behaviors promotes SDM better than patient activation only. Improving SDM for less educated patients is crucial.

Pubmed Abstract

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Associated Topics

  • Health Disparities
  • Health Services

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