Decisional role preferences, risk knowledge and information interests in patients with multiple sclerosis.

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Decisional role preferences, risk knowledge and information interests in patients with multiple sclerosis. / Heesen, Christoph; Kasper, Jürgen; Segal, Julia; Köpke, Sascha; Mühlhauser, Ingrid.

in: MULT SCLER J, Jahrgang 10, Nr. 6, 6, 2004, S. 643-650.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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Heesen C, Kasper J, Segal J, Köpke S, Mühlhauser I. Decisional role preferences, risk knowledge and information interests in patients with multiple sclerosis. MULT SCLER J. 2004;10(6):643-650. 6.

Bibtex

@article{3b2af76c9fa14f969658ebf9d400da62,
title = "Decisional role preferences, risk knowledge and information interests in patients with multiple sclerosis.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: Shared decision making is increasingly recognized as the ideal model of patient-physician communication especially in chronic diseases with partially effective treatments as multiple sclerosis (MS). To evaluate prerequisite factors for this kind of decision making we studied patients' decisional role preferences in medical decision making, knowledge on risks, information interests and the relations between these factors in MS. METHODS: After conducting focus groups to generate hypotheses, 219 randomly selected patients from the MS Outpatient Clinic register (n = 1374) of the University Hospital Hamburg received mailed questionnaires on their knowledge of risks in MS, their perception of their own level of knowledge, information interests and role preferences. RESULTS: Most patients (79%) indicated that they preferred an active role in treatment decisions giving the shared decision and the informed choice model the highest priority. MS risk knowledge was low but questionnaire results depended on disease course, disease duration and ongoing immune therapy. Measured knowledge as well as perceived knowledge was only weakly correlated with preferences of active roles. Major information interests were related to symptom alleviation, diagnostic procedures and prognosis. CONCLUSION: Patients with MS claimed autonomous roles in their health care decisions. The weak correlation between knowledge and preferences for active roles implicates that other factors largely influence role preferences.",
author = "Christoph Heesen and J{\"u}rgen Kasper and Julia Segal and Sascha K{\"o}pke and Ingrid M{\"u}hlhauser",
year = "2004",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "10",
pages = "643--650",
journal = "MULT SCLER J",
issn = "1352-4585",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Decisional role preferences, risk knowledge and information interests in patients with multiple sclerosis.

AU - Heesen, Christoph

AU - Kasper, Jürgen

AU - Segal, Julia

AU - Köpke, Sascha

AU - Mühlhauser, Ingrid

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - OBJECTIVE: Shared decision making is increasingly recognized as the ideal model of patient-physician communication especially in chronic diseases with partially effective treatments as multiple sclerosis (MS). To evaluate prerequisite factors for this kind of decision making we studied patients' decisional role preferences in medical decision making, knowledge on risks, information interests and the relations between these factors in MS. METHODS: After conducting focus groups to generate hypotheses, 219 randomly selected patients from the MS Outpatient Clinic register (n = 1374) of the University Hospital Hamburg received mailed questionnaires on their knowledge of risks in MS, their perception of their own level of knowledge, information interests and role preferences. RESULTS: Most patients (79%) indicated that they preferred an active role in treatment decisions giving the shared decision and the informed choice model the highest priority. MS risk knowledge was low but questionnaire results depended on disease course, disease duration and ongoing immune therapy. Measured knowledge as well as perceived knowledge was only weakly correlated with preferences of active roles. Major information interests were related to symptom alleviation, diagnostic procedures and prognosis. CONCLUSION: Patients with MS claimed autonomous roles in their health care decisions. The weak correlation between knowledge and preferences for active roles implicates that other factors largely influence role preferences.

AB - OBJECTIVE: Shared decision making is increasingly recognized as the ideal model of patient-physician communication especially in chronic diseases with partially effective treatments as multiple sclerosis (MS). To evaluate prerequisite factors for this kind of decision making we studied patients' decisional role preferences in medical decision making, knowledge on risks, information interests and the relations between these factors in MS. METHODS: After conducting focus groups to generate hypotheses, 219 randomly selected patients from the MS Outpatient Clinic register (n = 1374) of the University Hospital Hamburg received mailed questionnaires on their knowledge of risks in MS, their perception of their own level of knowledge, information interests and role preferences. RESULTS: Most patients (79%) indicated that they preferred an active role in treatment decisions giving the shared decision and the informed choice model the highest priority. MS risk knowledge was low but questionnaire results depended on disease course, disease duration and ongoing immune therapy. Measured knowledge as well as perceived knowledge was only weakly correlated with preferences of active roles. Major information interests were related to symptom alleviation, diagnostic procedures and prognosis. CONCLUSION: Patients with MS claimed autonomous roles in their health care decisions. The weak correlation between knowledge and preferences for active roles implicates that other factors largely influence role preferences.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 10

SP - 643

EP - 650

JO - MULT SCLER J

JF - MULT SCLER J

SN - 1352-4585

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -