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Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations

BACKGROUND: Much of the research on decision-making in health care has focused on consultation outcomes. Less is known about the process by which clinicians and patients come to a treatment decision. This study aimed to quantitatively describe the behaviour shown by doctors and patients during prima...

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Autores principales: Kaner, Eileen, Heaven, Ben, Rapley, Tim, Murtagh, Madeleine, Graham, Ruth, Thomson, Richard, May, Carl
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1781432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17214891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-7-2
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author Kaner, Eileen
Heaven, Ben
Rapley, Tim
Murtagh, Madeleine
Graham, Ruth
Thomson, Richard
May, Carl
author_facet Kaner, Eileen
Heaven, Ben
Rapley, Tim
Murtagh, Madeleine
Graham, Ruth
Thomson, Richard
May, Carl
author_sort Kaner, Eileen
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Much of the research on decision-making in health care has focused on consultation outcomes. Less is known about the process by which clinicians and patients come to a treatment decision. This study aimed to quantitatively describe the behaviour shown by doctors and patients during primary care consultations when three types of decision aids were used to promote treatment decision-making in a randomised controlled trial. METHODS: A video-based study set in an efficacy trial which compared the use of paper-based guidelines (control) with two forms of computer-based decision aids (implicit and explicit versions of DARTS II). Treatment decision concerned warfarin anti-coagulation to reduce the risk of stroke in older patients with atrial fibrillation. Twenty nine consultations were video-recorded. A ten-minute 'slice' of the consultation was sampled for detailed content analysis using existing interaction analysis protocols for verbal behaviour and ethological techniques for non-verbal behaviour. RESULTS: Median consultation times (quartiles) differed significantly depending on the technology used. Paper-based guidelines took 21 (19–26) minutes to work through compared to 31 (16–41) minutes for the implicit tool; and 44 (39–55) minutes for the explicit tool. In the ten minutes immediately preceding the decision point, GPs dominated the conversation, accounting for 64% (58–66%) of all utterances and this trend was similar across all three arms of the trial. Information-giving was the most frequent activity for both GPs and patients, although GPs did this at twice the rate compared to patients and at higher rates in consultations involving computerised decision aids. GPs' language was highly technically focused and just 7% of their conversation was socio-emotional in content; this was half the socio-emotional content shown by patients (15%). However, frequent head nodding and a close mirroring in the direction of eye-gaze suggested that both parties were active participants in the conversation CONCLUSION: Irrespective of the arm of the trial, both patients' and GPs' behaviour showed that they were reciprocally engaged in these consultations. However, even in consultations aimed at promoting shared decision-making, GPs' were verbally dominant, and they worked primarily as information providers for patients. In addition, computer-based decision aids significantly prolonged the consultations, particularly the later phases. These data suggest that decision aids may not lead to more 'sharing' in treatment decision-making and that, in their current form, they may take too long to negotiate for use in routine primary care.
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spelling pubmed-17814322007-01-25 Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations Kaner, Eileen Heaven, Ben Rapley, Tim Murtagh, Madeleine Graham, Ruth Thomson, Richard May, Carl BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Research Article BACKGROUND: Much of the research on decision-making in health care has focused on consultation outcomes. Less is known about the process by which clinicians and patients come to a treatment decision. This study aimed to quantitatively describe the behaviour shown by doctors and patients during primary care consultations when three types of decision aids were used to promote treatment decision-making in a randomised controlled trial. METHODS: A video-based study set in an efficacy trial which compared the use of paper-based guidelines (control) with two forms of computer-based decision aids (implicit and explicit versions of DARTS II). Treatment decision concerned warfarin anti-coagulation to reduce the risk of stroke in older patients with atrial fibrillation. Twenty nine consultations were video-recorded. A ten-minute 'slice' of the consultation was sampled for detailed content analysis using existing interaction analysis protocols for verbal behaviour and ethological techniques for non-verbal behaviour. RESULTS: Median consultation times (quartiles) differed significantly depending on the technology used. Paper-based guidelines took 21 (19–26) minutes to work through compared to 31 (16–41) minutes for the implicit tool; and 44 (39–55) minutes for the explicit tool. In the ten minutes immediately preceding the decision point, GPs dominated the conversation, accounting for 64% (58–66%) of all utterances and this trend was similar across all three arms of the trial. Information-giving was the most frequent activity for both GPs and patients, although GPs did this at twice the rate compared to patients and at higher rates in consultations involving computerised decision aids. GPs' language was highly technically focused and just 7% of their conversation was socio-emotional in content; this was half the socio-emotional content shown by patients (15%). However, frequent head nodding and a close mirroring in the direction of eye-gaze suggested that both parties were active participants in the conversation CONCLUSION: Irrespective of the arm of the trial, both patients' and GPs' behaviour showed that they were reciprocally engaged in these consultations. However, even in consultations aimed at promoting shared decision-making, GPs' were verbally dominant, and they worked primarily as information providers for patients. In addition, computer-based decision aids significantly prolonged the consultations, particularly the later phases. These data suggest that decision aids may not lead to more 'sharing' in treatment decision-making and that, in their current form, they may take too long to negotiate for use in routine primary care. BioMed Central 2007-01-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1781432/ /pubmed/17214891 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-7-2 Text en Copyright © 2007 Kaner et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kaner, Eileen
Heaven, Ben
Rapley, Tim
Murtagh, Madeleine
Graham, Ruth
Thomson, Richard
May, Carl
Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title_full Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title_fullStr Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title_full_unstemmed Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title_short Medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
title_sort medical communication and technology: a video-based process study of the use of decision aids in primary care consultations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1781432/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17214891
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-7-2
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