Patient decision aids: why, what, how, where? Dawn Stacey RN, PhD Research Chair in Knowledge Translation to Patients Full Professor, School of Nursing Director of the Patient Decision Aids Research Group Scientist, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute October, 2014 Think about a health decision that you or someone you know will make over the next year Thinking about that health decision… SURE Test ©2008 O’Connor & Legare Evolution of health information • < 1990: – healthcare professionals were gate keepers to information • 1990: www – passive viewing of information • 2004: Web 2.0 – allows users to interact with each other and contribute to website's content (e.g. social networking, wikis, video-sharing, blogs) • 2010: open access to publications of studies receiving public funds USA: R. 3590 The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (March 2010) Outline • Shared decision making (SDM) • Patient decision aids – What are they? – How do they work? – What is a high quality one? • Examples of patient decision aids Shared decision making A process by which a healthcare choice is made between the patient and one or more health professionals The crux of patient centred care (Legare et al., 2010; Makoul et al. 2006; Stacey et al. 2011) Shared decision making A process by which a healthcare choice is made between the patient and one or more health professionals (Legare et al., 2010; Makoul et al. 2006) Shared decision making Deliberation A process by which a healthcare choice is made between the patient and one or more health professionals Determination (Legare et al., 2010; Makoul et al. 2006; Politi et al., 2013) Patients involved in decision making… Improve o quality of life o sense of control over illness o symptom relief Decrease o fatigue o depression o illness concerns However, most patients would prefer more active involvement (Kiesler & Auerbach 2006; Hibbard & Greene 2013) Shared decision making A process by which a healthcare choice is made between the patient and one or more health professionals (Couet et al 2014) Outline • Shared decision making (SDM) • Patient decision aids – What are they? – How do they work? – What is a high quality one? • Examples of patient decision aids Patient Decision Aids adjuncts to counseling Inform • Provide facts Condition, options, benefits, harms • Communicate probabilities Clarify values • Ask which benefits/harms matters most • Share patient experiences • Facilitate communication Support • Guide in steps in deliberation/communication • Worksheets, list of questions (Stacey et al., Cochrane Library, 2014) Formats for patient decision aids (used prior to or within consultations) 1. Print 2. DVD/Video 3. Online/computer-based (Stacey et al., 2014) • Topics of Decision Aids (N=115) Medication (n=36) – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – • 10 hormone replacement therapy 3 atrial fibrillation anti-coagulants 3 cardiovascular 3 diabetes 2 osteoporosis 2 chemotherapy 2 breast cancer prevention 2 osteoarthritis knee hypertension multiple sclerosis schizophrenia depression natural health products ovarian risk management acute respiratory infection contraceptives coronary angiogram access site • – – – – – – – – – – – • 15 Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA) 7 BRCA1/2 genetic 11 colon cancer 6 prenatal 2 mammography 2 diabetes Colon cancer genetic Cervix cancer Stress testing for chest pain • 4 mastectomy +1 reconstruction 4 prostatectomy 4 hysterectomy 2 prophylactic BRCA1/2 2 coronary revascularization dental orchiectomy for advanced prostate ca back bariatric vasectomy long term feeding tube placement Obstetrics (n=6) – – – – – Screening (n=46) – – – – – – – – – Surgery (n=23) 2 vaginal birth after cesarean termination breech labour analgesia embryo transplant Other (n=4) – – – – Hepatitis B vaccine influenza vaccine Autologous blood donation Cystic Fibrosis Transplant Referral (Stacey et al., 2014 Cochrane Review) 15 Patient education vs. decision support (RNAO Best Practice Guideline: Decision Support for CKD, 2009) 16 Outline • Shared decision making (SDM) • Patient decision aids – What are they? – How do they work? – What is a high quality one? • Examples of patient decision aids 18 Cochrane Review of Patient Decision Aids: updates 140 115 120 100 86 80 55 60 35 40 20 17 0 1999 2003 2009 (Stacey et al., 2014 Cochrane Review) 2011 2014 Compared to usual care, PtDAs… Improve decision quality with… 6% reduced decisional conflict 13% higher knowledge 82% more accurate risk perception 51% better match between values & choices Helps undecided to decide (41%) Patients 34% less passive in decisions Improved patient-practitioner communication (8/9 trials) Potential to reduce over-use -20% surgery -14% PSA – prostate screening -27% Hormone replacement tx (Stacey et al., 2014 Cochrane Review) Outline • Shared decision making (SDM) • Patient decision aids – What are they? – How do they work? – What is a high quality one? • Examples of patient decision aids International Patient Decision Aid Standards (IPDAS) Collaboration since 2003 To enhance the quality and effectiveness of patient decision aids by establishing a shared evidence-informed framework for improving their content, development, implementation, and evaluation. IPDAS Steering Committee: Glyn Elwyn & Dawn Stacey (Co-Leads), M Barry, N Col, A Coulter, K Eden, M Härter, M Holmes-Rovner, H Llewellyn-Thomas, V Montori, N Moumjid, M Pignone, R Thomson, L Trevena, R Volk, T van der Weijden BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making 2013, 13 (Suppl 2). http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmedinformdecismak/supplements/13/S2 Outline • Shared decision making (SDM) • Patient decision aids – What are they? – How do they work? – What is a high quality one? • Examples of patient decision aids To find decision aids go to… http://www.med-decs.org/nl To find decision aids Google: ‘decision aid’ Prostate Cancer Knowing Your Options: A Decision Aid for Men With Clinically Localized Prostate Cancer Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Localised prostate cancer - low risk Option Grid Collaborative Compared to controls (n=59), those exposed to the decision aid (n=48) had: -higher confidence in their immunization decision -higher intent to be immunized Key Messages • Shared decision making is important for patient centred care • Patient decision aids prepare patients by: – Making explicit the decision – Providing balanced evidence on options – Asking patients what matters most • Evidence supports their effectiveness & quality http://decisionaid.ohri.ca