
The DECISIONS study: a nationwide survey of United States adults regarding 9 common medical decisions.
Patient involvement is required before patients' preferences can be reflected in the medical care they receive. Furthermore, patients are a vital link between physicians' assessments of patients' needs and actual implementation of appropriate care. Yet no study has specifically examined how and when a representative sample of patients considered, discussed, and made medical decisions.To identify decision prevalence and decision-making processes regarding 1) initiation of prescription medications for hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, or depression; 2) screening tests for colorectal, breast, or prostate cancer; and 3) surgeries for knee or hip replacement, cataracts, or lower back pain.Computer-assisted telephone interview survey.Nationally representative sample of US adults in households with telephones.3010 English-speaking adults age 40 and older identified using a stratified random sample of telephone numbers.Estimated prevalence of medical decisions, defined as the patient having initiated medications, been screened, or had surgery within the past 2 years or having discussed these actions with a health care provider during the same interval, as well as decision-specific data regarding patient knowledge, attitudes and patient-provider interactions.82.2% of the target population reported making at least 1 medical decision in the preceding 2 years. The proportion of decisions resulting in patient action varied dramatically both across decision type (medications [61%] v. screening [83%] v. surgery [44%]; P < 0.001), and within each category (e.g., blood pressure medications [76%] v. cholesterol medications [55%] vs. depression medications [48%]; P < 0.001). Respondents reported making more decisions if they had a primary care provider or poorer health status and fewer decisions if they had lower education, were male, or were under age 50. Limitations. Retrospective self-reports may incorporate recall biases.Medical decisions with significant life-saving, quality of life, and cost implications are a pervasive part of life for most US adults. The DECISIONS dataset provides a rich research environment for exploring factors influencing when and how patients make common medical decisions.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Regression Analysis
- Quality of Life
- Practice Patterns, Physicians'
- Physician-Patient Relations
- Patient-Centered Care
- Patient Satisfaction
- Multivariate Analysis
- Middle Aged
- Male
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Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- United States
- Regression Analysis
- Quality of Life
- Practice Patterns, Physicians'
- Physician-Patient Relations
- Patient-Centered Care
- Patient Satisfaction
- Multivariate Analysis
- Middle Aged
- Male