RA Patients Make Conservative Clinical Choices | Arthritis Information

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Given A Choice, Arthritis Patients Take More Conservative Clinical Approach

A recent study suggests that increasing patient responsibility for making medical decisions may decrease their willingness to accept risky treatment options. Details of this proof-of-concept study appear in the December issue of Arthritis Care & Research, a journal published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf of the American College of Rheumatology.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) nearly 1.1 billion visits to physician offices and hospital outpatient and emergency departments were made in the U.S. in 2006. A noval approach to doctor-patient interactions has emerged where both a patient and health care professional share information and jointly decide on course of treatment for the patient. This approach called shared-decision making (SDM) has been used in clincical settings to improve the quality of care for patients. Past studies have shown that increasing patient participation in decision-making decreases utiliztion of risky procedures. Other studies indicate that risk perception is increased under conditions that emphasize choice.

Liana Fraenkel, M.D., M.P.H., from Yale University School of Medicine and Ellen Peters, Ph.D., from Decision Research enrolled 216 participants in their medical decision making study. A demographic profile of the subjects showed that 70% were Caucasian, 62% were female, and the mean age was 59 years. Participants attending outpatient clinic appointments were asked to view a video in which a physician described the availability of a new medication associated with a rare risk of a serious side effect.

Video A discussed a new medication to prevent heart disease where patients have the rare risk of developing jaw necrosis. Video B described a new medication to treat chronic pain where there was a risk of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy relevant to patients with rheumatic diseases. Participants were provided 2 consecutive sets of instructions following the video viewing. The first set of instructions was designed to minimize choice, "The doctor decides that you should take this medication and she writes you a prescription for it." The second set of instructions maximized choice: "The doctor tells you that it is completely up to you whether or not you take this medication and then asks you to make a decision."

"We found that highlighting the perception of having a choice increases patients' worry about the risks of adverse events and decreases their willingness to accept treatment," said Dr. Fraenkel. Results showed the willingness of patients to take the proposed medication was lower (mean ± SD 4.2 ± 3.7 versus 5.3 ± 3.7) and their worry about the risk of the adverse event was greater in the high compared with the low involvement condition (mean ± SD 6.1 ± 3.7 versus 5.5 ± 3.8). "Clinicians should be aware that promoting increased patient responsibility for decisions involving their health care may be associated with lower uptake of risky procedures or interventions," advised Dr. Fraenkel

Article: "Patient Responsibility for Medical Decision Making and Risky Treatment Options." Liana Fraenkel and Ellen Peters. Arthritis Care & Research; Published Online: November 30, 2009 (DOI:10.1002/art.24947); Print Issue Date: December 2009.

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/172418.php
This study does us no favors at all.  I can already see doctors reverting back to the "do as I say" treatment protocol rather than "collaborative treatment decision."
 
True, patients may indeed become more "worried" when educating themselves and uncovering all the potential adverse effects, but I also believe that once an educated decision is made regarding treatment, that quite likely the treatment is more apt to work, rather than be discarded.
 
Someone ought to do a study on whether a patient improves when he himself has research and chosen his own treatment option. [I'm sure this has already been done.]
 
Hell knoweth no fury as a patient whose physician shoves a prescription at her and who hasn't discussed it and other options. Must have a collaborative team. 

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