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      Informed decision making in outpatient practice: time to get back to basics.

      JAMA
      Colorado, Complementary Therapies, Comprehension, Cross-Sectional Studies, Decision Making, Disclosure, Family Practice, General Surgery, Humans, Informed Consent, Observer Variation, Office Visits, Oregon, Outpatients, Patient Participation, Physician's Practice Patterns, Physician-Patient Relations, Private Practice, Risk Assessment, Uncertainty

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          Abstract

          Many clinicians have called for an increased emphasis on the patient's role in clinical decision making. However, little is known about the extent to which physicians foster patient involvement in decision making, particularly in routine office practice. To characterize the nature and completeness of informed decision making in routine office visits of both primary care physicians and surgeons. Cross-sectional descriptive evaluation of audiotaped office visits during 1993. A total of 1057 encounters among 59 primary care physicians (general internists and family practitioners) and 65 general and orthopedic surgeons; 2 to 12 patients were recruited from each physician's community-based private office. Analysis of audiotaped patient-physician discussions for elements of informed decision making, using criteria that varied with the level of decision complexity: basic (eg, laboratory test), intermediate (eg, new medication), or complex (eg, procedure). Criteria for basic decisions included discussion of the nature of the decision and asking the patient to voice a preference; other categories had criteria that were progressively more stringent. The 1057 audiotaped encounters contained 3552 clinical decisions. Overall, 9.0% of decisions met our definition of completeness for informed decision making. Basic decisions were most often completely informed (17.2%), while no intermediate decisions were completely informed, and only 1 (0.5%) complex decision was completely informed. Among the elements of informed decision making, discussion of the nature of the intervention occurred most frequently (71 %) and assessment of patient understanding least frequently (1.5%). Informed decision making among this group of primary care physicians and surgeons was often incomplete. This deficit was present even when criteria for informed decision making were tailored to expect less extensive discussion for decisions of lower complexity. These findings signal the need for efforts to encourage informed decision making in clinical practice.

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