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Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study

BACKGROUND: Person-centered care (PCC) requires knowledge about patient preferences. Among people living with cognitive impairments (PlwCI), evidence on quantitative, choice-based preferences, which allow to quantify, weigh, and rank care elements, is limited. Furthermore, data on the congruence of...

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Autores principales: Mohr, Wiebke, Rädke, Anika, Afi, Adel, Weber, Niklas, Platen, Moritz, Mühlichen, Franka, Scharf, Annelie, Michalowsky, Bernhard, Hoffmann, Wolfgang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IOS Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36502324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220753
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author Mohr, Wiebke
Rädke, Anika
Afi, Adel
Weber, Niklas
Platen, Moritz
Mühlichen, Franka
Scharf, Annelie
Michalowsky, Bernhard
Hoffmann, Wolfgang
author_facet Mohr, Wiebke
Rädke, Anika
Afi, Adel
Weber, Niklas
Platen, Moritz
Mühlichen, Franka
Scharf, Annelie
Michalowsky, Bernhard
Hoffmann, Wolfgang
author_sort Mohr, Wiebke
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Person-centered care (PCC) requires knowledge about patient preferences. Among people living with cognitive impairments (PlwCI), evidence on quantitative, choice-based preferences, which allow to quantify, weigh, and rank care elements, is limited. Furthermore, data on the congruence of patient preferences with physicians’ judgements for PCC are missing. Such information is expected to support the implementation of PCC; state-of-the-art medical care aligned with patients’ preferences. OBJECTIVE: To elicit patient preferences and physicians’ judgements for PCC and their congruence. METHODS: Data from the mixed-methods PreDemCare study, including a cross-sectional, paper-and-pencil, interviewer-assisted analytic hierarchy process (AHP) survey conducted with n = 50 community-dwelling PlwCI and n = 25 physicians. Individual AHP weights (preferences/judgements) were calculated with the principal eigenvector method and aggregated per group by aggregation of individual priorities mode. Individual consistency ratios (CRs) were calculated and aggregated per group. Group differences in preferences/judgements were investigated descriptively by means and standard deviations (SDs) of AHP weights, resulting ranks, and boxplots. Additionally, differences between groups were investigated with independent paired t-test/Mann Whitney U-test. Sensitivity of AHP results was tested by inclusion/exclusion of inconsistent respondents, with an accepted threshold at CR≤0.3 for patients, and CR≤0.2 for physicians, due to better cognitive fitness of the latter group. RESULTS: Patient preferences and physicians’ judgements did not differ significantly, except for the criterion Memory Exercises (AHP weights (mean (SD)): 0.135 (0.066) versus 0.099 (0.068), p = 0.01). We did not see rank-reversals of criteria after exclusion of inconsistent participants. Mean CR for patients at the criteria level was 0.261, and 0.181 for physicians. CONCLUSION: Physicians’ judgements in our setting aligned well with patients’ preferences. Our findings may be used to guide the implementation of preference-based PCC.
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spelling pubmed-99127262023-02-11 Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study Mohr, Wiebke Rädke, Anika Afi, Adel Weber, Niklas Platen, Moritz Mühlichen, Franka Scharf, Annelie Michalowsky, Bernhard Hoffmann, Wolfgang J Alzheimers Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Person-centered care (PCC) requires knowledge about patient preferences. Among people living with cognitive impairments (PlwCI), evidence on quantitative, choice-based preferences, which allow to quantify, weigh, and rank care elements, is limited. Furthermore, data on the congruence of patient preferences with physicians’ judgements for PCC are missing. Such information is expected to support the implementation of PCC; state-of-the-art medical care aligned with patients’ preferences. OBJECTIVE: To elicit patient preferences and physicians’ judgements for PCC and their congruence. METHODS: Data from the mixed-methods PreDemCare study, including a cross-sectional, paper-and-pencil, interviewer-assisted analytic hierarchy process (AHP) survey conducted with n = 50 community-dwelling PlwCI and n = 25 physicians. Individual AHP weights (preferences/judgements) were calculated with the principal eigenvector method and aggregated per group by aggregation of individual priorities mode. Individual consistency ratios (CRs) were calculated and aggregated per group. Group differences in preferences/judgements were investigated descriptively by means and standard deviations (SDs) of AHP weights, resulting ranks, and boxplots. Additionally, differences between groups were investigated with independent paired t-test/Mann Whitney U-test. Sensitivity of AHP results was tested by inclusion/exclusion of inconsistent respondents, with an accepted threshold at CR≤0.3 for patients, and CR≤0.2 for physicians, due to better cognitive fitness of the latter group. RESULTS: Patient preferences and physicians’ judgements did not differ significantly, except for the criterion Memory Exercises (AHP weights (mean (SD)): 0.135 (0.066) versus 0.099 (0.068), p = 0.01). We did not see rank-reversals of criteria after exclusion of inconsistent participants. Mean CR for patients at the criteria level was 0.261, and 0.181 for physicians. CONCLUSION: Physicians’ judgements in our setting aligned well with patients’ preferences. Our findings may be used to guide the implementation of preference-based PCC. IOS Press 2023-01-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9912726/ /pubmed/36502324 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220753 Text en © 2023 – IOS Press. All rights reserved https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mohr, Wiebke
Rädke, Anika
Afi, Adel
Weber, Niklas
Platen, Moritz
Mühlichen, Franka
Scharf, Annelie
Michalowsky, Bernhard
Hoffmann, Wolfgang
Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title_full Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title_fullStr Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title_full_unstemmed Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title_short Do They Align? Congruence Between Patient Preferences of People Living with Cognitive Impairments and Physicians’ Judgements for Person-Centered Care: An Analytic Hierarchy Process Study
title_sort do they align? congruence between patient preferences of people living with cognitive impairments and physicians’ judgements for person-centered care: an analytic hierarchy process study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912726/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36502324
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/JAD-220753
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