4.4 Review

Where Is the Evidence? A Systematic Review of Shared Decision Making and Patient Outcomes

期刊

MEDICAL DECISION MAKING
卷 35, 期 1, 页码 114-131

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0272989X14551638

关键词

shared decision making; medical decision making; patient outcomes; systematic review

资金

  1. University of Texas School of Public Health Cancer Education and Career Development Program (National Cancer Institute/NIH) [R25 CA57712]
  2. National Institute on Aging [1F31AG040923-01]
  3. Center for Health Communications Research at the University of Michigan [5P50CA101451-09]
  4. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [R25CA057712, P50CA101451] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  5. NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON AGING [F31AG040923] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background. Despite widespread advocacy for shared decision making (SDM), the empirical evidence regarding its effectiveness to improve patient outcomes has not been systematically reviewed. The purpose of this study was to systematically review the empirical evidence linking patient outcomes and SDM, when the decision-making process has been explicitly measured, and to identify under what measurement perspectives SDM is associated with which types of patient outcomes (affective-cognitive, behavioral, and health). Data Sources. PubMed (through December 2012) and hand search of article bibliographies. Study Selection. Studies were included if they empirically 1) measured SDM in the context of a patient-clinician interaction and 2) evaluated the relationship between SDM and at least 1 patient outcome. Data Extraction. Study results were categorized by SDM measurement perspective (patient-reported, clinician-reported, or observer-rated) and outcome type (affective-cognitive, behavioral, or health). Data Synthesis. Thirty-nine studies met inclusion criteria. Thirty-three used patient-reported measures of SDM, 6 used observer-rated measures, and 2 used clinician-reported measures. Ninety-seven unique patient outcomes were assessed; 51% affective-cognitive, 28% behavioral, and 21% health. Only 43% of assessments (n = 42) found a significant and positive relationship between SDM and the patient outcome. This proportion varied by SDM measurement perspective and outcome category. It was found that 52% of outcomes assessed with patient-reported SDM were significant and positive, compared with 21% with observer-rated and 0% with clinician-reported SDM. Regardless of measurement perspective, SDM was most likely to be associated with affective-cognitive patient outcomes (54%), compared with 37% of behavioral and 25% of health outcomes. Limitations. The relatively small number of studies precludes meta-analysis. Because the study inclusion and exclusion criteria required both an empirical measure of SDM and an assessment of the association between that measure and a patient outcome, most included studies were observational in design. Conclusions. SDM, when perceived by patients as occurring, tends to result in improved affective-cognitive outcomes. Evidence is lacking for the association between empirical measures of SDM and patient behavioral and health outcomes.

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