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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 7/2018

21.02.2018 | Original Research

Patient and Clinician Perspectives on Shared Decision-making in Early Adopting Lung Cancer Screening Programs: a Qualitative Study

verfasst von: Renda Soylemez Wiener, MD, MPH, Elisa Koppelman, MSW, MPH, Rendelle Bolton, MPH, MSW, MA, Karen E. Lasser, MD, MPH, Belinda Borrelli, PhD, David H. Au, MD, MS, Christopher G. Slatore, MD, MS, Jack A. Clark, PhD, Hasmeena Kathuria, MD

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 7/2018

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ABSTRACT

Background

Guidelines recommend, and Medicare requires, shared decision-making between patients and clinicians before referring individuals at high risk of lung cancer for chest CT screening. However, little is known about the extent to which shared decision-making about lung cancer screening is achieved in real-world settings.

Objective

To characterize patient and clinician impressions of early experiences with communication and decision-making about lung cancer screening and perceived barriers to achieving shared decision-making.

Design

Qualitative study entailing semi-structured interviews and focus groups.

Participants

We enrolled 36 clinicians who refer patients for lung cancer screening and 49 patients who had undergone lung cancer screening in the prior year. Participants were recruited from lung cancer screening programs at four hospitals (three Veterans Health Administration, one urban safety net).

Approach

Using content analysis, we analyzed transcripts to characterize communication and decision-making about lung cancer screening. Our analysis focused on the recommended components of shared decision-making (information sharing, deliberation, and decision aid use) and barriers to achieving shared decision-making.

Key Results

Clinicians varied in the information shared with patients, and did not consistently incorporate decision aids. Clinicians believed they explained the rationale and gave some (often purposely limited) information about the trade-offs of lung cancer screening. By contrast, some patients reported receiving little information about screening or its trade-offs and did not realize the CT was intended as a screening test for lung cancer. Clinicians and patients alike did not perceive that significant deliberation typically occurred. Clinicians perceived insufficient time, competing priorities, difficulty accessing decision aids, limited patient comprehension, and anticipated patient emotions as barriers to realizing shared decision-making.

Conclusions

Due to multiple perceived barriers, patient-clinician conversations about lung cancer screening may fall short of guideline-recommended shared decision-making supported by a decision aid. Consequently, patients may be left uncertain about lung cancer screening’s rationale, trade-offs, and process.
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Metadaten
Titel
Patient and Clinician Perspectives on Shared Decision-making in Early Adopting Lung Cancer Screening Programs: a Qualitative Study
verfasst von
Renda Soylemez Wiener, MD, MPH
Elisa Koppelman, MSW, MPH
Rendelle Bolton, MPH, MSW, MA
Karen E. Lasser, MD, MPH
Belinda Borrelli, PhD
David H. Au, MD, MS
Christopher G. Slatore, MD, MS
Jack A. Clark, PhD
Hasmeena Kathuria, MD
Publikationsdatum
21.02.2018
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 7/2018
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-018-4350-9

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