Clinicians' concerns about decision support interventions for patients facing breast cancer surgery options: understanding the challenge of implementing shared decision-making
Publication year
2011Source
Health Expectations, 14, 2, (2011), pp. 133-146ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
IQ Healthcare
Journal title
Health Expectations
Volume
vol. 14
Issue
iss. 2
Page start
p. 133
Page end
p. 146
Subject
NCEBP 3: Implementation Science; NCEBP 3: Implementation ScienceAbstract
BACKGROUND: There is interest in interventions that provide support for patients facing challenging decisions, such as the choice between mastectomy and breast conservation surgery for breast cancer. However, it is difficult to implement these interventions. One potential source of resistance is the attitudes of clinicians. OBJECTIVE: To examine specialist breast clinicians' opinions about the provision of decision support interventions (DesIs) for patients. METHODS: As part of the development of a web-based DesI (BresDex), semi-structured interviews were conducted with specialist clinicians [breast surgeons, breast care nurses (BCNs) and oncologists] from four breast units in a UK region, and speciality national opinion leaders. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and analysed using the Framework approach. RESULTS: A majority of the 24 clinicians interviewed did not have a working knowledge of DesIs and were ambivalent or sceptical. Many expressed conflicting opinions: they noted the potential benefits, but at the same time expressed reservations about information overlap, overload and about content that they considered inappropriate. Many wanted access to DesIs to be always under clinical supervision. In particular, they were uncertain as regards how DeSIs could be tailored to individual patients' needs and also accommodate clinical practice variation. BCNs were particularly concerned that DesIs might induce patient anxiety and replace their role. CONCLUSIONS: The concept of providing interventions to support patients in decision-making tasks generated concern, defensiveness and scepticism. These attitudes will be a significant barrier. Implementation efforts will need to recognize and address these issues if these interventions are to become embedded in clinical practice.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [204860]
- Electronic publications [103192]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [81031]
- Open Access publications [71756]
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