Title: PatientPhysician Agreement on the Content of CHD Prevention Discussions
1Patient-Physician Agreement on the Content of CHD
Prevention Discussions
- Lindy Behrend, MPH
- Hossein Maymani, BS
- Megan Diehl, BS
- Ziya Gizlice, PhD
- Jianwen Cai, PhD
- Stacey L. Sheridan, MD, MPH
- The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Funding Source National Heart Lung and Blood
Institute (1 K23 HL074375)
2Background
- To optimize decision making and clinical care, a
common perception of the content and outcomes of
clinical discussions is desirable. - Little is known about whether patients and
physicians perceive the content and outcomes of
clinical discussions similarly.
3Objectives
- To examine the agreement between patients and
physicians regarding the content and outcome of
coronary heart disease (CHD) prevention
discussions. - To compare patient and physician reports of
content and outcome to coded transcriptions of
clinic visits.
4Methods Study Overview
Audio recording of visit
Patient and physician surveys about visits
5Study Setting
- One university internal medicine clinic
- 94 providers (18 attendings and 76 residents)
- 59 (63) providers agreed to participate in the
larger study - 19 providers (16 attendings and 3 residents) had
patients enrolled in the study at the time of
this analysis
6Participants
- All patients (n115) actively participating in
the larger trial at the time of this analysis. - Patients included if
- Ages 40-79
- No prior history of cardiovascular disease,
diabetes mellitus, or other serious medical
condition - At moderate (6-9) to high risk (gt10) of heart
disease over 10 years based on a Framingham risk
equation - Patients excluded if
- Presenting for first visit
- No cholesterol checks within past 18 months
- Unable to speak or read English
- Systolic BP gt180 or total cholesterol gt300
7Study Procedures
- Following one clinic visit, we surveyed both
patients and their physicians about visit content
and outcomes. - We audio-recorded a sub-sample of visits
- transcribed them verbatim
- two independent readers code their content (kappa
0.88-1.0)
8Survey Content
- CHD prevention discussion (yes, no)
- Discussion content (mostly pros, pros cons,
mostly cons) - Involvement in Decision Making
- Patient expression of preferences (a lot, a
little, not really) - Who made the final decision (MD, shared, patient)
- Recommendations and Final Decisions
- Physician recommendations (take medicine, change
lifestyle) - Final decision (take medicine, change lifestyle)
9 Analysis
- For each outcome of interest, we calculated
- Percent agreement
- Simple or Weighted Cohens kappas
- Almost perfect agreement 0.80 to 1.00
- Substantial agreement 0.60 to 0.79
- Moderate agreement 0.40 to 0.59
- Fair agreement 0.20 to 0.39
- Poor agreement 0.00 to 0.19
- No agreement lt0.00 (e.g. worse than chance)
- Examined patterns of disagreement
Landis and Koch 1977. Biometrics 33159.
10Results Patient Characteristics
11Physician Characteristics
12Patient and Physician Agreement on Presence of
CHD Discussion (n115)
13Patient and Physician Agreement on Discussion
Content (n98)
Physician report
Patient report
Total percent agreement 62 Kappa .22 (-.02 -
.46)
14Patient and Physician Agreement on Patient
Expression of Preferences (n98)
Physician report
Patient report
8
Total percent agreement 43 Kappa .20 (.04 -
.36)
15Patient and Physician Agreement on Who Made
Final Decision (n98)
Physician report
Patient report
Total percent agreement 44 Kappa .04 (-.10 -
.19)
16Patient and Physician Agreement on
Recommendations and Final Decisions (n98)
17Sub-sample Analysis
18Verification of Discussion Presence (Sub-sample)
19Verification of Discussion Content (Sub-sample)
20Verification of Patient Involvement (Sub-sample)
21Verification of Physician Recommendations and
Final Decisions (Sub-sample)
22Conclusions
- Our analysis of patient-physician surveys
indicated - Fair to moderate agreement on physician
recommendations and final decisions to take
medicine/change lifestyle - Poor to fair agreement on discussion content,
patient expression of preferences, and who made
final decision - Coded transcriptions agreed with surveys on most
outcomes - Patient and physician surveys vs. transcriptions
did not agree on discussion content or patient
involvement
23Limitations
- Small sample size overall limits precision of
estimates - Results from coded transcriptions are hypothesis
generating only - Potential for recall bias as physicians may not
have completed surveys immediately following
clinic visits - Results may not generalize to more diverse
populations, including those with less education
or less desire for shared decision making
24Implications
- Disagreements about content and participation in
clinical discussions may be common. - Audio recorded measures should be considered as
an alternative to patient and physician reports
of clinical discussions. - Further study is needed
- in larger and more diverse populations
- to determine the impact on clinical outcomes
- to explore how best to facilitate clearer
communication among patients and physicians
25Thank you!
26(No Transcript)
27Where are the Disagreements Who Made Final
Decision
Patients perceived themselves as less involved in
DM than physicians perceived
Physician view of who made decision
Patient view of who made decision
Physicians and patients agreed on who made
decision
Patients perceived themselves as more involved in
DM than physicians perceived
28(No Transcript)
29Coding of Visit Transcripts
- CHD prevention discussion
- Specific statement about lowering chances of CHD
- Discussion content
- Counted of pros and cons
- Categorized as mostly pros, pros cons, mostly
cons
30Coding of Transcripts
- Patient expression of preferences
- Counted preferences expressed
- Categorized as a lot (3 or more), a little (1-2),
not really (0) - Who made the final decision
- Counted whether prevention options were
discussed, the MD and patients expressed
preferences, decision was made - Combined into 5 categories (MD alone, shared,
patient alone) - Recommendations and Final Decisions
- Specific statement of recommendation or plan to
take medicine or make lifestyle changes
31Transcription definition of decision-making
Element may or may not be present a Involves
some, but not all, elements b Must involve all
elements
32Transcription coding of decision-making
- What characterized the discussion about lowering
the patients chances - of heart disease?
- The doctor made the decisions using all that's
known about the ways to lower the chances of
heart disease. - The physician assumed total control of decision
making, involving some form of an authoritarian
statement. The physician did not offer treatment
options or check the patient for his/her
understanding, values, or agreement. - The doctor made the decisions but strongly
considered the patients opinion. - The physician assumed control of decision making,
but asked for the patients opinions and values,
or checked for the patients knowledge and
understanding of treatment options.
33Transcription coding of decision-making
- What characterized the discussion about lowering
the patients chances - of heart disease?
- The doctor and the patient made the decisions
together on an equal basis. - Shared decision making is a negotiated event
that involves both discussion and choice. To be
considered a shared decision, the interaction
must include all of the following - discussion of treatment options (including pros
and cons) or physician check that patient has
adequate knowledge/no remaining questions about
the facts - opportunity for the patient to express values,
concerns, and/or preferences, or physician check
for these things - opportunity for physician to make
recommendation/express values - making or deferring a decision
34Transcription coding of decision-making
- What characterized the discussion about lowering
the patients chances - of heart disease?
- The patient made the decisions but strongly
considered the doctor's opinion. - The patient assumed control of decision making
(I want to do this), but asked for the
physicians input/opinion or physician expressed
opinion regarding treatment choice. - The patient made the decisions using all he/she
knows or has learned about how to lower the
chances of heart disease. - The patient made a treatment decision without
discussion of the physicians opinion. The
patient sought no treatment information from the
physician, did not ask the physician to help
clarify values, and did not ask for agreement.