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Assessing patients' preferences for treatments for angina using a modified repertory grid method

Assessing patients' preferences for treatments for angina using a modified repertory grid method
Assessing patients' preferences for treatments for angina using a modified repertory grid method
A current popular theme in medicine concerns whether and how patients should be involved in treatment choice. Assuming patient involvement is desirable, how should one go about eliciting preferences? A variety of quantitative and qualitative methods exist that may be used for this purpose, one of which is the repertory grid method. This method involves eliciting constructs (reasons) for preferences through comparing sets of three options. This method allows the structured elicitation of the reasons behind individual preferences, but also, when used with generalised procrustes analysis (GPA), allows aggregation of individual data to reveal general preference patterns. In this study the repertory grid method was used to examine patient preferences for angina treatments with the goal of, first, gaining some understanding of general patterns of patient preference, and second, examining the likely utility of the technique in this setting. A sample of 21 patients with mild and stable angina from two general practices in Norfolk, UK was interviewed using the repertory grid method to elicit the constructs underlying their preferences amongst seven angina treatments (including 'no treatment'). Individualised questionnaires were then produced and sent to the patients for self-completion, which required rating the extent to which each construct was relevant for each treatment (scored on visual analogue rating scales). Analysis of the ratings, using GPA, showed that the constructs clustered around two dimensions: 'some treatment' versus 'no treatment', and drug treatment versus surgical treatment. While some treatment was generally preferred to no treatment, individuals varied in preference for drug treatments or surgical treatments. Although the latter were generally perceived as 'effective' they were also perceived, for example, as 'invasive', 'frightening', related to 'negative experiences', and being more appropriate for when symptoms are severe ('proportionate'). We consider the implications of these results for involving patients in choosing amongst treatments.
patient preference, angina treatments, repertory grid
0277-9536
2585 - 2595
Rowe, Gene
59f8beaf-c7bb-4929-84f5-2129cc646712
Lambert, Nigel
d579eaf7-49a2-4fb3-94bb-ba0d724ee656
Bowling, Ann
796ca209-687f-4079-8a40-572076251936
Ebrahim, Shah
0f2ade5c-4ef6-4ca7-9f9b-9b60ba192b13
Wakeling, Ian
9129c784-003f-42a4-9ec7-e41d4343c5bd
Thomson, Richard
e9f815c0-7122-4fdc-9bd7-f867139e614f
Rowe, Gene
59f8beaf-c7bb-4929-84f5-2129cc646712
Lambert, Nigel
d579eaf7-49a2-4fb3-94bb-ba0d724ee656
Bowling, Ann
796ca209-687f-4079-8a40-572076251936
Ebrahim, Shah
0f2ade5c-4ef6-4ca7-9f9b-9b60ba192b13
Wakeling, Ian
9129c784-003f-42a4-9ec7-e41d4343c5bd
Thomson, Richard
e9f815c0-7122-4fdc-9bd7-f867139e614f

Rowe, Gene, Lambert, Nigel, Bowling, Ann, Ebrahim, Shah, Wakeling, Ian and Thomson, Richard (2005) Assessing patients' preferences for treatments for angina using a modified repertory grid method. Social Science & Medicine, 60 (11), 2585 - 2595. (doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.10.019). (PMID:15814183)

Record type: Article

Abstract

A current popular theme in medicine concerns whether and how patients should be involved in treatment choice. Assuming patient involvement is desirable, how should one go about eliciting preferences? A variety of quantitative and qualitative methods exist that may be used for this purpose, one of which is the repertory grid method. This method involves eliciting constructs (reasons) for preferences through comparing sets of three options. This method allows the structured elicitation of the reasons behind individual preferences, but also, when used with generalised procrustes analysis (GPA), allows aggregation of individual data to reveal general preference patterns. In this study the repertory grid method was used to examine patient preferences for angina treatments with the goal of, first, gaining some understanding of general patterns of patient preference, and second, examining the likely utility of the technique in this setting. A sample of 21 patients with mild and stable angina from two general practices in Norfolk, UK was interviewed using the repertory grid method to elicit the constructs underlying their preferences amongst seven angina treatments (including 'no treatment'). Individualised questionnaires were then produced and sent to the patients for self-completion, which required rating the extent to which each construct was relevant for each treatment (scored on visual analogue rating scales). Analysis of the ratings, using GPA, showed that the constructs clustered around two dimensions: 'some treatment' versus 'no treatment', and drug treatment versus surgical treatment. While some treatment was generally preferred to no treatment, individuals varied in preference for drug treatments or surgical treatments. Although the latter were generally perceived as 'effective' they were also perceived, for example, as 'invasive', 'frightening', related to 'negative experiences', and being more appropriate for when symptoms are severe ('proportionate'). We consider the implications of these results for involving patients in choosing amongst treatments.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 15 December 2004
Published date: June 2005
Keywords: patient preference, angina treatments, repertory grid
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 334610
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/334610
ISSN: 0277-9536
PURE UUID: a87fd065-ac03-4c9f-9982-49f30f35646e

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Date deposited: 30 Mar 2012 13:18
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 10:35

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Contributors

Author: Gene Rowe
Author: Nigel Lambert
Author: Ann Bowling
Author: Shah Ebrahim
Author: Ian Wakeling
Author: Richard Thomson

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