Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk

Objective: This study assesses the attitudes and preferences of Chinese clinicians toward their involvement in shared decision making (SDM). Methods: From May 2014 to May 2015, 200 Chinese clinicians from two hospitals were enrolled to complete a survey on their attitude towards SDM. We conducted th...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rong-Chong Huang, Xian-Tao Song, Dong-Feng Zhang, Jia-Ying Xu, Kasey R. Boehmer, Aaron A. Leppin, Michael R. Gionfriddo, Henry H. Ting, Victor M. Montori
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/02eeb751c921458381edba65722af416
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:02eeb751c921458381edba65722af416
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:02eeb751c921458381edba65722af4162021-12-02T14:15:21ZPreferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk2095-882X10.1016/j.cdtm.2019.05.001https://doaj.org/article/02eeb751c921458381edba65722af4162019-06-01T00:00:00Zhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095882X18300768https://doaj.org/toc/2095-882XObjective: This study assesses the attitudes and preferences of Chinese clinicians toward their involvement in shared decision making (SDM). Methods: From May 2014 to May 2015, 200 Chinese clinicians from two hospitals were enrolled to complete a survey on their attitude towards SDM. We conducted the survey via face-to-face interviews before and after an educational intervention on SDM among young Chinese clinicians. The clinicians were asked to give the extent of agreement to SDM. They also gave the extent of difficulty in using decision aids (DAs) during the SDM process. The variation in the range of responses to each question before and after the SDM intervention was recorded. The frequency of changed responses was analyzed by using JMP 6.0 software. Data were statistically analyzed using Chi-square and Mann–Whitney U tests, as appropriate to the data type. Multiple logistic regressions were used to test for those factors significantly and independently associated with preference for an approach for each scenario. Results: Of the 200 young Chinese clinicians sampled, 59.0% indicated a preference for SDM and a desire to participate in SDM before receiving education or seeing the DA, and this number increased to 69.0% after seeing the DA with the sample video of the SDM process on Statin Choice. However, 28.5% of the respondents still reported that, in their current practice, they make clinical decisions on behalf of their patients. The clinicians who denied a desire to use the DA stated that the main barriers to implement SDM or DA use in China are lack of time and knowledge of SDM. Conclusions: Most young Chinese clinicians want to participate in SDM. However, they state the main barriers to perform SDM are lack of experience and time. The educational intervention about SDM that exposes clinicians to DAs was found to increase their receptivity. Keywords: Decision aid, Shared-decision making, Cardiovascular risk, ChinaRong-Chong HuangXian-Tao SongDong-Feng ZhangJia-Ying XuKasey R. BoehmerAaron A. LeppinMichael R. GionfriddoHenry H. TingVictor M. MontoriKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.articleMedicine (General)R5-920ENChronic Diseases and Translational Medicine, Vol 5, Iss 2, Pp 105-112 (2019)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine (General)
R5-920
spellingShingle Medicine (General)
R5-920
Rong-Chong Huang
Xian-Tao Song
Dong-Feng Zhang
Jia-Ying Xu
Kasey R. Boehmer
Aaron A. Leppin
Michael R. Gionfriddo
Henry H. Ting
Victor M. Montori
Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
description Objective: This study assesses the attitudes and preferences of Chinese clinicians toward their involvement in shared decision making (SDM). Methods: From May 2014 to May 2015, 200 Chinese clinicians from two hospitals were enrolled to complete a survey on their attitude towards SDM. We conducted the survey via face-to-face interviews before and after an educational intervention on SDM among young Chinese clinicians. The clinicians were asked to give the extent of agreement to SDM. They also gave the extent of difficulty in using decision aids (DAs) during the SDM process. The variation in the range of responses to each question before and after the SDM intervention was recorded. The frequency of changed responses was analyzed by using JMP 6.0 software. Data were statistically analyzed using Chi-square and Mann–Whitney U tests, as appropriate to the data type. Multiple logistic regressions were used to test for those factors significantly and independently associated with preference for an approach for each scenario. Results: Of the 200 young Chinese clinicians sampled, 59.0% indicated a preference for SDM and a desire to participate in SDM before receiving education or seeing the DA, and this number increased to 69.0% after seeing the DA with the sample video of the SDM process on Statin Choice. However, 28.5% of the respondents still reported that, in their current practice, they make clinical decisions on behalf of their patients. The clinicians who denied a desire to use the DA stated that the main barriers to implement SDM or DA use in China are lack of time and knowledge of SDM. Conclusions: Most young Chinese clinicians want to participate in SDM. However, they state the main barriers to perform SDM are lack of experience and time. The educational intervention about SDM that exposes clinicians to DAs was found to increase their receptivity. Keywords: Decision aid, Shared-decision making, Cardiovascular risk, China
format article
author Rong-Chong Huang
Xian-Tao Song
Dong-Feng Zhang
Jia-Ying Xu
Kasey R. Boehmer
Aaron A. Leppin
Michael R. Gionfriddo
Henry H. Ting
Victor M. Montori
author_facet Rong-Chong Huang
Xian-Tao Song
Dong-Feng Zhang
Jia-Ying Xu
Kasey R. Boehmer
Aaron A. Leppin
Michael R. Gionfriddo
Henry H. Ting
Victor M. Montori
author_sort Rong-Chong Huang
title Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
title_short Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
title_full Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
title_fullStr Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
title_full_unstemmed Preferences and attitudes of young Chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
title_sort preferences and attitudes of young chinese clinicians about using a shared decision making tools for communicating cardiovascular risk
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
publishDate 2019
url https://doaj.org/article/02eeb751c921458381edba65722af416
work_keys_str_mv AT rongchonghuang preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT xiantaosong preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT dongfengzhang preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT jiayingxu preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT kaseyrboehmer preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT aaronaleppin preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT michaelrgionfriddo preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT henryhting preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
AT victormmontori preferencesandattitudesofyoungchinesecliniciansaboutusingashareddecisionmakingtoolsforcommunicatingcardiovascularrisk
_version_ 1718391704457838592