Abstract

BackgroundShared decision-making (SDM) is preferred by many patients in cancer care. However, despite scientific evidence and promotion by health policy makers, SDM implementation in routine health care lags behind. This study aimed to evaluate an empirically and theoretically grounded implementation program for SDM in cancer care.MethodsIn a stepped wedge design, three departments of a comprehensive cancer center sequentially received the implementation program in a randomized order. It included six components: training for health care professionals (HCPs), individual coaching for physicians, patient activation intervention, patient information material/decision aids, revision of quality management documents, and reflection on multidisciplinary team meetings (MDTMs). Outcome evaluation comprised four measurement waves. The primary endpoint was patient-reported SDM uptake using the 9-item Shared Decision Making Questionnaire. Several secondary implementation outcomes were assessed. A mixed-methods process evaluation was conducted to evaluate reach and fidelity. Data were analyzed using mixed linear models, qualitative content analysis, and descriptive statistics.ResultsA total of 2,128 patient questionnaires, 559 questionnaires from 408 HCPs, 132 audio recordings of clinical encounters, and 842 case discussions from 66 MDTMs were evaluated. There was no statistically significant improvement in the primary endpoint SDM uptake. Patients in the intervention condition were more likely to experience shared or patient-lead decision-making than in the control condition (d=0.24). HCPs in the intervention condition reported more knowledge about SDM than in the control condition (d = 0.50). In MDTMs the quality of psycho-social information was lower in the intervention than in the control condition (d = − 0.48). Further secondary outcomes did not differ statistically significantly between conditions. All components were implemented in all departments, but reach was limited (e.g., training of 44% of eligible HCPs) and several adaptations occurred (e.g., reduced dose of coaching).ConclusionsThe process evaluation provides possible explanations for the lack of statistically significant effects in the primary and most of the secondary outcomes. Low reach and adaptations, particularly in dose, may explain the results. Other or more intensive approaches are needed for successful department-wide implementation of SDM in routine cancer care. Further research is needed to understand factors influencing implementation of SDM in cancer care.Trial registrationclinicaltrials.gov, NCT03393351, registered 8 January 2018.

Highlights

  • Shared decision-making (SDM) is preferred by many patients in cancer care

  • Other or more intensive approaches are needed for successful department-wide implementation of SDM in routine cancer care

  • This study evaluated a multi-component shared decision-making (SDM) implementation program that was informed by a pre-implementation pilot study and theoretically grounded in a conceptual framework

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Summary

Introduction

Shared decision-making (SDM) is preferred by many patients in cancer care. despite scientific evidence and promotion by health policy makers, SDM implementation in routine health care lags behind. Health care decisions often revolve around complex treatment options with various patterns of benefits and risks and with a substantial impact on the patient’s subsequent quality of life [1] This makes it especially important to consider patients’ values and preferences during the decision-making process [2, 3]. In shared decisionmaking (SDM), an important component of high-quality health care, patients and health care professionals (HCPs) build a team in the decision-making process by combining medical knowledge with personal preferences and values to find the option that best suits the patient’s individual situation [8,9,10]. This lack of implementation has been associated with patients’ decision regret as well as lower patient-reported quality of care and physician communication [7, 22]

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