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Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research.

Publication ,  Conference
van Til, JA; Pearce, A; Ozdemir, S; Hollin, IL; Peay, HL; Wu, AW; Ostermann, J; Deal, K; Craig, BM
Published in: Patient
January 2024

Health preference research (HPR) is being increasingly conducted to better understand patient preferences for medical decisions. However, patients vary in their desire to play an active role in medical decisions. Until now, few studies have considered patients' preferred roles in decision making. In this opinion paper, we advocate for HPR researchers to assess and account for role preferences in their studies, to increase the relevance of their work for medical and shared decision making. We provide recommendations on how role preferences can be elicited and integrated with health preferences: (1) in formative research prior to a health preference study that aims to inform medical decisions or decision makers, (2a) in the development of health preference instruments, for instance by incorporating a role preference instrument and (2b) by clarifying the respondent's role in the decision prior to the preference elicitation task or by including role preferences as an attribute in the task itself, and (3) in statistical analysis by including random parameters or latent classes to raise awareness of heterogeneity in role preferences and how it relates to health preferences. Finally, we suggest redefining the decision process as a model that integrates the role and health preferences of the different parties that are involved. We believe that the field of HPR would benefit from learning more about the extent to which role preferences relate to health preferences, within the context of medical and shared decision making.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Patient

DOI

EISSN

1178-1661

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

17

Issue

1

Start / End Page

3 / 12

Location

New Zealand

Related Subject Headings

  • Research Design
  • Patients
  • Patient Preference
  • Patient Participation
  • Humans
  • Decision Making, Shared
  • Decision Making
  • Clinical Decision-Making
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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van Til, J. A., Pearce, A., Ozdemir, S., Hollin, I. L., Peay, H. L., Wu, A. W., … Craig, B. M. (2024). Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research. In Patient (Vol. 17, pp. 3–12). New Zealand. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40271-023-00649-4
Til, Janine A. van, Alison Pearce, Semra Ozdemir, Ilene L. Hollin, Holly L. Peay, Albert W. Wu, Jan Ostermann, Ken Deal, and Benjamin M. Craig. “Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research.” In Patient, 17:3–12, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1007/s40271-023-00649-4.
van Til JA, Pearce A, Ozdemir S, Hollin IL, Peay HL, Wu AW, et al. Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research. In: Patient. 2024. p. 3–12.
van Til, Janine A., et al. “Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research.Patient, vol. 17, no. 1, 2024, pp. 3–12. Pubmed, doi:10.1007/s40271-023-00649-4.
van Til JA, Pearce A, Ozdemir S, Hollin IL, Peay HL, Wu AW, Ostermann J, Deal K, Craig BM. Role Preferences in Medical Decision Making: Relevance and Implications for Health Preference Research. Patient. 2024. p. 3–12.
Journal cover image

Published In

Patient

DOI

EISSN

1178-1661

Publication Date

January 2024

Volume

17

Issue

1

Start / End Page

3 / 12

Location

New Zealand

Related Subject Headings

  • Research Design
  • Patients
  • Patient Preference
  • Patient Participation
  • Humans
  • Decision Making, Shared
  • Decision Making
  • Clinical Decision-Making
  • 42 Health sciences
  • 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences