Medical Psychology - Article Summary [UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM]
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Shared decision making (SDM) is a model to engage patients in the process of deciding about diagnosis, treatment or follow-up when more than one medically reasonable option is available. It hasn’t been fully implemented in clinical practice yet.
The shared decision making model arises from the themes beneficence (1), non-maleficence (2), patient autonomy (3) and justice (4). In effective decisions, there is sufficient evidence on benefit-harm ratios and harms are small compared to benefits. In effective decisions, there is one optimal strategy. In preference-sensitive decisions, there is no best strategy as there is either insufficient evidence or the ratio depends on the patient’s values.
Practice variation could be countered by using SDM and this could also reduce health care costs. Patient’s preferences vary widely (1), are often different from physician preferences (2) and cannot be predicted by patient characteristics (3). In the treatment decision making process, there are three steps; information exchange (1), deliberation (2) and making a decision (3).
There essential aspects of SDM are define or explain the problem (1), present options (2), discuss the pros and cons (3), assess patient’s values or preferences (4), discuss patient’s ability or self-efficacy (5), provide doctor knowledge or recommendations (6), check or clarify understanding (7), make or explicitly defer decision (8) and arrange a follow-up (9).
SDM consists of four steps:
In practice, most clinician’s present a decision as a fact and do not discuss alternative options. The patient’s preferences are also not assessed often.
Patients often believe that the doctor will make the right decision as he knows what is best. However, some decisions are not evidence based because of a lack of evidence and thus preference-based.
A pitfall in communicating benefits and harms of treatment is implicit normativity (i.e. presenting the information in a way that implicitly steers the patient towards one specific option).
There are several methods to support SDM in clinical practice:
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