Slide Presentation from the AHRQ 2008 Annual Conference
On September 9, 2008, David H. Hickam, M.D., M.P.H., made this presentation at the 2008 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (570 KB).
Slide 1
Promoting Patient Involvement in Medication Decisions
David H. Hickam, MD, MPH
Professor, Dept. of Medicine
Oregon Health & Science University
Portland, Oregon
Slide 2
Goals of this Session
- Review concepts of shared decision making.
- Describe results of focus groups to assess consumers' perceptions of sources of medical information.
- Describe our work developing tools to promote shared decision making.
Slide 3
The Role of Evidence in Shared Decision Making
- What is evidence?
- How does evidence inform medical decisions?
- Can clinicians and patients communicate about evidence?
- Are simple evidence-based decision tools useful?
Slide 4
Clinical Problems for which Decision Aids are Useful
Decisions that are complicated because:
- There is no single best choice.
- People vary in the values or personal importance that they place on the benefits vs. the harms associated with each of the options.
- There is scientific uncertainty about the benefits and harms associated with options.
O'Connor A et al. Decision aids for people facing health treatment or screening decisions. The Cochrane Library 2006;Issue 4
Slide 5
Options for Tools to Promote Shared Decision Making
- Educational/Informational.
- Simple decision aids:
- Provide probabilities, preference information, coached steps toward decision).
- Detailed decision aids:
- All of above plus one or more of the following: customized risk tools, probabilities that adjust with risk level, explicit values clarification, etc.
Slide 6
Focus Groups to Assess Consumers' Perceptions of Information Sources
- Perceived need for information about conditions and treatments.
- Perceptions about sharing decisions with clinicians.
- Where the participants obtain information.
- Brief review of examples.
Slide 7
Focus Group Participants
- 18 focus groups (total of 113 participants).
- Membership in each group defined by a particular chronic disease:
- Arthritis.
- Hypertension.
- Type 2 diabetes.
- Osteoporosis.
Slide 8
Focus Group Characteristics
- Two-thirds female.
- 60% age 60 or greater.
- 75% Caucasian.
- 43% college graduates.
- 44% had used Internet in last month..
- One-third rated their health as fair or poor.
Slide 9
Preferences for Information Sources
- Short and easy to read.
- Many participants were not comfortable with Internet as information source.
- Desire for positive information: often an issue when evidence is "negative."
- Framing of mortality information.
- Trusted sources of information such as government and, AARP, or the Arthritis Foundation:
Slide 10
Preferences for Content of Information Sources
- Consensus that information about benefits is the most important.
- Participants understand benefit/harm trade-offs.
- Desire that side effect information be thorough.
- Comparison to "non-medical" treatments.
Slide 11
Perspective about Interactions with Providers
- Consensus on value of shared decision making.
- Few participants reported collaborative, trusting relationships with clinicians.
- Clinic visits tend to be rushed.
- Some felt pressure to make hurried decisions.
- Skepticism about recommendations to "talk to your doctor."
- Endorsement of tools that provide new information.
Slide 12
Principles for the Use of Evidence in Decision Tools
- Include evidence about both benefits and harms of the alternatives.
- Indicate where the evidence in inconclusive.
- Make the information actionable:
- Need clarity about what the decisions are and how to approach those decisions.
Slide 13
Key Features of Eisenberg Center Summary Guides
- Brief & focused on key messages.
- Explicitly designed for audiences.
- Style template:
- Benefits, Risks, Trade-offs.
- Plain language.
- Appropriate literacy & numeracy levels.
- Actionable information.
Slide 14
Up Front Bottom Line
An image of a document entitled, "Fast Facts on Pain Relievers." The page gives facts on taking Acetaminophen, prescription pain relievers, NSAID pills, Aspirin, Capsaicin skin cream, and Salicylate skin cream.
Slide 15
Understanding the Benefits
An image of a document entitled, "Understanding the Benefits of Pain Medicines." The page gives informational bullet points for each "Over-the-Counter" pain reliever and "Prescription" pain-relief pills.
Slide 16
Decision Coaching
An image of a document entitled, "Sorting it Out." The page answers basic questions pertaining to the benefits, risks, and costs associated with choosing pain medication.
Slide 17
Actionable Numeric Data
For treatments of early stage prostate cancer:
- Proportion of men reporting impotence following each treatment, at 2 years:
- 58% after radical prostatectomy.
- 43% after radiation therapy.
- 86% with hormonal therapy.
- 33% with watchful waiting.
Slide 18
Conclusions about Evidence Translation
- Both clinicians and consumers are interested in evidence and believe that it influences decisions.
- Credibility is crucial.
- We do not know very much about how clinicians and patients communicate about evidence.
- Consumers perceive that evidence-based decision tools might be useful.
Current as of January 2009
Internet Citation:
Promoting Patient Involvement in Medication Decisions. Slide Presentation from the AHRQ 2008 Annual Conference (Text Version). January 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/about/annualmtg08/090908slides/Hickam.htm