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Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Dionise, ZR; Gonzalez, JM; Garcia-Roig, ML; Kirsch, AJ; Scales, CD; Wiener, JS; Purves, JT; Routh, JC
Published in: Urology
June 2019

OBJECTIVE: To quantitatively evaluate parental preferences for the various treatments for vesicoureteral reflux using crowd-sourced best-worst scaling, a novel technique in urologic preference estimation. METHODS: Preference data were collected from a community sample of parents via 2 best-worst scaling survey instruments published to Amazon's Mechanical Turk online community. Attributes and attribute levels were selected following extensive review of the reflux literature. Respondents completed an object case best-worst scaling exercise to prioritize general aspects of reflux treatments and multiprofile case best-worst scaling to elicit their preferences for the specific differences in reflux treatments. Data were analyzed using multinomial logistic regression. Results from the object-case provided probability scaled values (PSV) that reflected the order of importance of attributes. RESULTS: We analyzed data for 248 and 228 respondents for object and multiprofile case BWS, respectively. When prioritizing general aspects of reflux treatment, effectiveness (PSV = 20.37), risk of future urinary tract infection (PSV = 14.85), and complication rate (PSV = 14.55) were most important to parents. Societal cost (PSV = 1.41), length of hospitalization (PSV = 1.09), and cosmesis (PSV = 0.91) were least important. Parents perceived no difference in preference for the cosmetic outcome of open vs minimally invasive surgery (P = .791). Bundling attribute preference weights, parents in our study would choose open surgery 74.9% of the time. CONCLUSION: High treatment effectiveness was the most important and preferred attribute to parents. Alternatively, cost and cosmesis were among the least important. Our findings serve to inform shared parent-physician decision-making for vesicoureteral reflux.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Urology

DOI

EISSN

1527-9995

Publication Date

June 2019

Volume

128

Start / End Page

71 / 77

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Vesico-Ureteral Reflux
  • Urology & Nephrology
  • Urologic Surgical Procedures
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Parents
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Female
 

Citation

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ICMJE
MLA
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Dionise, Z. R., Gonzalez, J. M., Garcia-Roig, M. L., Kirsch, A. J., Scales, C. D., Wiener, J. S., … Routh, J. C. (2019). Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study. Urology, 128, 71–77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2019.01.045
Dionise, Zachary R., Juan Marcos Gonzalez, Michael L. Garcia-Roig, Andrew J. Kirsch, Charles D. Scales, John S. Wiener, J Todd Purves, and Jonathan C. Routh. “Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study.Urology 128 (June 2019): 71–77. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.urology.2019.01.045.
Dionise ZR, Gonzalez JM, Garcia-Roig ML, Kirsch AJ, Scales CD, Wiener JS, et al. Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study. Urology. 2019 Jun;128:71–7.
Dionise, Zachary R., et al. “Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study.Urology, vol. 128, June 2019, pp. 71–77. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.urology.2019.01.045.
Dionise ZR, Gonzalez JM, Garcia-Roig ML, Kirsch AJ, Scales CD, Wiener JS, Purves JT, Routh JC. Parental Preferences for Vesicoureteral Reflux Treatment: A Crowd-sourced, Best-worst Scaling Study. Urology. 2019 Jun;128:71–77.
Journal cover image

Published In

Urology

DOI

EISSN

1527-9995

Publication Date

June 2019

Volume

128

Start / End Page

71 / 77

Location

United States

Related Subject Headings

  • Young Adult
  • Vesico-Ureteral Reflux
  • Urology & Nephrology
  • Urologic Surgical Procedures
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Parents
  • Middle Aged
  • Male
  • Humans
  • Female