학술논문

Patient Preferences Regarding Shared Decision Making in the Emergency Department: Findings From a Multisite Survey
Document Type
article
Source
Academic Emergency Medicine. 25(10)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Clinical Research
Emergency Care
Health Services
Behavioral and Social Science
Management of diseases and conditions
7.3 Management and decision making
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Cross-Sectional Studies
Decision Making
Emergency Service
Hospital
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Participation
Patient Preference
Physician-Patient Relations
Surveys and Questionnaires
United States
Public Health and Health Services
Emergency & Critical Care Medicine
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
ObjectivesAs shared decision making (SDM) has received increased attention as a method to improve the patient-centeredness of emergency department (ED) care, we sought to determine patients' desired level of involvement in medical decisions and their perceptions of potential barriers and facilitators to SDM in the ED.MethodsWe surveyed a cross-sectional sample of adult ED patients at three academic medical centers across the United States. The survey included 32 items regarding patient involvement in medical decisions including a modified Control Preference Scale and questions about barriers and facilitators to SDM in the ED. Items were developed and refined based on prior literature and qualitative interviews with ED patients. Research assistants administered the survey in person.ResultsOf 797 patients approached, 661 (83%) agreed to participate. Participants were 52% female, 45% white, and 30% Hispanic. The majority of respondents (85%-92%, depending on decision type) expressed a desire for some degree of involvement in decision making in the ED, while 8% to 15% preferred to leave decision making to their physician alone. Ninety-eight percent wanted to be involved with decisions when "something serious is going on." The majority of patients (94%) indicated that self-efficacy was not a barrier to SDM in the ED. However, most patients (55%) reported a tendency to defer to the physician's decision making during an ED visit, with about half reporting they would wait for a physician to ask them to be involved.ConclusionWe found that the majority of ED patients in our large, diverse sample wanted to be involved in medical decisions, especially in the case of a "serious" medical problem, and felt that they had the ability to do so. Nevertheless, many patients were unlikely to actively seek involvement and defaulted to allowing the physician to make decisions during the ED visit. After fully explaining the consequences of a decision, clinicians should make an effort to explicitly ascertain patients' desired level of involvement in decision making.