A patient decision aid to support shared decision-making on anti-thrombotic treatment of patients with atrial fibrillation: randomised controlled trial
A patient decision aid to support shared decision-making on anti-thrombotic treatment of patients with atrial fibrillation: randomised controlled trial
Objective: to determine the efficacy of a computerised decision aid in patients with atrial fibrillation making decisions on whether to take warfarin or aspirin therapy.
Design: two-armed open exploratory randomised controlled trial.
Setting: two research clinics deriving participants from general practices in Northeast England.
Participants: 109 patients with atrial fibrillation aged over 60.
Interventions: computerised decision aid applied in shared decision-making clinic compared to evidence-based paper guidelines applied as direct advice.
Main outcome measures: primary outcome measure was the decision conflict scale. Secondary outcome measures included anxiety, knowledge, decision-making preference, treatment decision, use of primary and secondary care services and health outcomes.
Results: decision conflict was lower in the computerised decision aid group immediately after the clinic; mean difference ?0.18 (95% CI ?0.34 to ?0.01). Participants in this group not already on warfarin were much less likely to start warfarin than those in the guidelines arm (4/16, 25% compared to the guidelines group 15/16, 93.8%, RR 0.27, 95% CI 0.11 to 0.63).
Conclusions: decision conflict was lower immediately following the use of a computerised decision aid in a shared decision-making consultation than immediately following direct doctor-led advice based on paper guidelines. Furthermore, participants in the computerised decision aid group were significantly much less likely to start warfarin than those in the guidelines arm. The results show that such an approach has a positive impact on decision conflict comparable to other studies of decision aids, but also reduces the uptake of a clinically effective treatment that may have important implications for health outcomes
216-223
Thomson, Richard G.
c1115e86-e5ec-4043-a449-17e67923e085
Eccles, Martin P.
8302a13f-e4de-4930-9c83-2e0c02f93230
Steen, I. Nick
3e6a444d-2d79-4681-b9c5-7e494937b33c
Greenaway, Jane
b555bcd2-ad37-48d1-a853-76430654d65f
Stobbart, Lynne
c27fad8c-c2f7-470f-a39b-a04201760784
Murtagh, Madeleine J.
ba5ad04d-863e-4c2b-8323-3ddf63f33457
May, Carl R.
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
June 2007
Thomson, Richard G.
c1115e86-e5ec-4043-a449-17e67923e085
Eccles, Martin P.
8302a13f-e4de-4930-9c83-2e0c02f93230
Steen, I. Nick
3e6a444d-2d79-4681-b9c5-7e494937b33c
Greenaway, Jane
b555bcd2-ad37-48d1-a853-76430654d65f
Stobbart, Lynne
c27fad8c-c2f7-470f-a39b-a04201760784
Murtagh, Madeleine J.
ba5ad04d-863e-4c2b-8323-3ddf63f33457
May, Carl R.
17697f8d-98f6-40d3-9cc0-022f04009ae4
Thomson, Richard G., Eccles, Martin P., Steen, I. Nick, Greenaway, Jane, Stobbart, Lynne, Murtagh, Madeleine J. and May, Carl R.
(2007)
A patient decision aid to support shared decision-making on anti-thrombotic treatment of patients with atrial fibrillation: randomised controlled trial.
Quality and Safety in Health Care, 16 (3), .
(doi:10.1136/qshc.2006.018481).
Abstract
Objective: to determine the efficacy of a computerised decision aid in patients with atrial fibrillation making decisions on whether to take warfarin or aspirin therapy.
Design: two-armed open exploratory randomised controlled trial.
Setting: two research clinics deriving participants from general practices in Northeast England.
Participants: 109 patients with atrial fibrillation aged over 60.
Interventions: computerised decision aid applied in shared decision-making clinic compared to evidence-based paper guidelines applied as direct advice.
Main outcome measures: primary outcome measure was the decision conflict scale. Secondary outcome measures included anxiety, knowledge, decision-making preference, treatment decision, use of primary and secondary care services and health outcomes.
Results: decision conflict was lower in the computerised decision aid group immediately after the clinic; mean difference ?0.18 (95% CI ?0.34 to ?0.01). Participants in this group not already on warfarin were much less likely to start warfarin than those in the guidelines arm (4/16, 25% compared to the guidelines group 15/16, 93.8%, RR 0.27, 95% CI 0.11 to 0.63).
Conclusions: decision conflict was lower immediately following the use of a computerised decision aid in a shared decision-making consultation than immediately following direct doctor-led advice based on paper guidelines. Furthermore, participants in the computerised decision aid group were significantly much less likely to start warfarin than those in the guidelines arm. The results show that such an approach has a positive impact on decision conflict comparable to other studies of decision aids, but also reduces the uptake of a clinically effective treatment that may have important implications for health outcomes
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Published date: June 2007
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Local EPrints ID: 163567
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/163567
ISSN: 1475-3898
PURE UUID: cc4f7f44-6c0b-43d7-93b3-b8de73f5a47f
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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2010 10:58
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:06
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Contributors
Author:
Richard G. Thomson
Author:
Martin P. Eccles
Author:
I. Nick Steen
Author:
Jane Greenaway
Author:
Lynne Stobbart
Author:
Madeleine J. Murtagh
Author:
Carl R. May
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