Communicating conviction: A pilot study of patient perspectives on guidance during medical decision-making in the United States

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Karel-Bart Celie, Allyn Auslander, Stuart Kuschner
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Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the difficult task of balancing access to misinformation with respect for patient decision-making. Due to its innate antagonism, the paradigm of “physician paternalism” versus “patient autonomy” may not adequately capture the clinical relationship. The authors hypothesized that most patients would, in fact, prefer significant physician input as opposed to unopinionated information when making medical decisions. There is a lack of empirical data corroborating this in the United States. To that end, a survey was distributed to 650 individuals through Amazon Mechanical Turk, of which 499 responses met pre-determined quality criteria. Most respondents believed their doctor's insight would be better than their own if injured or gravely ill. When asked to affirm preferences separately, a significantly higher proportion of respondents preferred guidance from their doctor when making medical decisions compared to being presented with unopinionated information ( p < 0.001). Encouragingly, 93.1% believed that the doctor's primary goal was their health. When asked directly to compare physician guidance to unopinionated information, 69.1% respondents stated they would prefer physician guidance. We found a consistent association between educational/economic background and affirmative responses ( p < 0.001), suggesting particular attention should be paid to patients that are disadvantaged with respect to these demographic factors. The belief in a shared goal, and a consistent preference for physician input, suggests that patients endorse a more collaborative view of the clinical dynamic than is suggested by the paternalism-autonomy paradigm. This pilot study suggests physicians should not be afraid to communicate conviction with regard to treatment decisions.
沟通信念:美国医疗决策指导过程中患者观点的试点研究
2019冠状病毒病大流行凸显了在获取错误信息与尊重患者决策之间取得平衡的艰巨任务。由于其固有的对抗性,“医生家长主义”与“患者自主”的范式可能无法充分捕捉临床关系。作者假设,在做出医疗决定时,大多数患者实际上更喜欢重要的医生输入,而不是无偏见的信息。在美国,缺乏证实这一点的经验数据。为此,我们通过亚马逊土耳其机器人向650人分发了一份调查问卷,其中499人的回答符合预先确定的质量标准。大多数受访者认为,如果他们受伤或身患重病,医生的洞察力会比他们自己的更好。当被要求单独确认偏好时,与提供无偏见信息相比,在做出医疗决定时,更倾向于医生指导的受访者比例要高得多(p <0.001)。令人鼓舞的是,93.1%的人认为医生的首要目标是他们的健康。当被要求直接比较医生指导和非个性化信息时,69.1%的受访者表示他们更喜欢医生指导。我们发现教育/经济背景与积极回应之间存在一致的联系(p <0.001),提示应特别关注在这些人口因素方面处于不利地位的患者。对共同目标的信念,以及对医生输入的一贯偏好,表明患者支持一种更合作的临床动态观点,而不是家长式自治范式所建议的观点。这项初步研究表明,医生不应该害怕就治疗决定沟通信念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Clinical Ethics
Clinical Ethics Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
42
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