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Physician Awareness of Patients' Preferred Level of Involvement in Decision Making

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Loyola University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Preferred Level of Involvement in Decision Making

Treatments

Other: Physician Awareness
Other: Usual Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Understanding a patient's decision-making preferences can help physicians meet their expectations and may increase patient satisfaction with the decision-making process.

Full description

Many health systems are shifting policies to promote greater patient involvement in healthcare delivery. Studies have shown that general medical patients who are more active in their care are more satisfied, more committed, have a better understanding of treatment plans, and experience greater improvements in health and patient-centered outcomes when compared to more passive patients. That being said, studies have found that patients have varying preferences when it comes to decision making. Understanding a patient's decision-making preferences can help physicians meet their expectations and may increase patient satisfaction with the decision-making process.

This awareness of decision-making preferences could be beneficial in treating quality of life conditions. Patients seeking care for pelvic floor disorders make medical decisions aimed toward improving symptoms, function, and quality of life. In a recent study, researchers found that 50% of women preferred active involvement, 45% collaborative and 5% passive. However, patients were 1.56 (95% CI:1.06-2.29) times more likely to report collaborative or passive involvement after their visit (p=0.02) with 40% of patients rating their actual role as active, 48% as collaborative, and 11% as passive. In this study, 37% of women did not experience their preferred level of decision-making. Other studies have similar findings with reported 20-40% discordance between patients' preferred involvement and what was achieved.

Discordance can negatively impact patients' outcomes and experiences of care. Interventions to minimize discordance between patients' preferred and perceived involvement in decision-making may significantly improve their overall experience and satisfaction. One possible intervention is eliciting women's preferred level of involvement in decision making prior to the visit and making this information available to the physician. The current study aims to determine whether physicians' awareness of patients' preferred involvement in decision making prior to their initial urogynecologist visit affects patients' perceived involvement in decision making after their visit.

Enrollment

107 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 99 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Present to Loyola's Urogynecology clinic for their initial evaluation
  • Agree to complete the study questionnaires
  • Must be at least 18 years of age
  • Must be able to read, speak and write in English

Exclusion criteria

  • Established patients at Loyola's Urogynecology clinic
  • Unable to complete the study questionnaires
  • Less than 18 years of age
  • Unable to read, speak and write in English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

107 participants in 2 patient groups

Physician Awareness
Experimental group
Description:
The physician will have access to the pre-visit Control Preference Scale survey results for women assigned to this group
Treatment:
Other: Physician Awareness
Usual Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
The physician will not have access to the pre-visit Control Preference Scale survey results for women assigned to this group
Treatment:
Other: Usual Care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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