Abstract

Patients engaging in shared decision making must weigh the likelihood of positive and negative outcomes and deal with uncertainty and negative emotions in the situations where desirable options might not be available. The use of “nudges,” or communication techniques that influence patients’ choices in a predictable direction, may assist patients in making complex decisions. However, nudging patients may be perceived as inappropriate influence on patients’ choices. We sought to determine whether key stakeholders, physicians, and laypersons without clinical training consider the use of nudges to be ethical and appropriate in medical decision making. Eighty-nine resident-physicians and 336 Mechanical-Turk workers (i.e., non-clinicians) evaluated two hypothetical preference-sensitive situations, in which a patient with advanced cancer chooses between chemotherapy and hospice care. We varied the following: (1) whether or not the patient’s decision was influenced by a mistaken judgment (i.e., decision-making bias) and (2) whether or not the physician used a nudge. Each participant reported the extent to which the communication was ethical, appropriate, and desirable. Both physicians and non-clinicians considered using nudges more positively than not using them, regardless of an initial decision-making bias in patients’ considerations. Decomposing this effect, we found that physicians viewed the nudge that endorsed hospice care more favorably than the nudge that endorsed chemotherapy, while non-clinicians viewed the nudge that endorsed chemotherapy more favorably than the nudge that endorsed hospice care. We discuss implications and propose exploring further physicians’ and patients’ differences in the perception of nudges; the differences may suggest limitations for using nudges in medical decisions.

Highlights

  • Patients engaging in shared decision making often struggle to match available treatment options with their own goals and preferences

  • We aim to investigate how non-clinicians and physicians perceive the use of nudges in preference-sensitive, end-of-life decisions

  • Non-clinicians were reached via a Mechanical Turk (Mturk) online panel in July 2016

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Summary

Introduction

Patients engaging in shared decision making often struggle to match available treatment options with their own goals and preferences. These decisions may be influenced by predictable cognitive errors that negatively impact patient well-being. Research in behavior economics has demonstrated that, while making decisions, individuals can assign different weights to losses and corresponding gains, imperfectly predict future preferences, and inaccurately remember their past experiences [1]. Studies have demonstrated that calorie labeling was not effective in reducing calories intake [2]. To assist patients in navigating decision-making processes and counteract cognitive errors, physicians may be able to use “nudges,” or communication strategies with predictable effects on the resulting patient choice, [3]

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