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DEVELOPING A SHARED DECISION MAKING CURRICULUM Angela Fagerlin, PhD.

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Presentation on theme: "DEVELOPING A SHARED DECISION MAKING CURRICULUM Angela Fagerlin, PhD."— Presentation transcript:

1 DEVELOPING A SHARED DECISION MAKING CURRICULUM Angela Fagerlin, PhD

2 So Who Am I To Talk To You About Shared Decision Making Curriculum?  Co-Director of one shared decision making course at the Society of Medical Decision Making.  Will teach the SMDM course again this month as well as a 2 nd course for researchers and clinicians at our Veterans Affairs hospitals/research centers.  I teach a 1week (40 hours) course on the development of decision aids.

3 Co-Director Mary Politi, PhD Assistant Professor Washington University St. Louis, Missouri

4 Instructors Dominick Frosch, PhDKaren Sepucha, PhD

5 Year 1: 4 Parts  Introduction / Overview of Shared Decision Making  Psychology of Medical Decision Making  Heuristics and Biases  Risk Communication  Decision Support Interventions  Development  Evaluation  Implementation  Measuring a Quality Decision

6 Dominick Frosch, PhD Introduction / Background Shared Decision Making

7 Introduction / Background  Define patient engagement  Relationship of SDM with evidence based medicine  Defining and relating equipoise to shared decision making

8 Introduction / Background  Steps in shared decision making  Identify situations in which SDM is critical  Acknowledge decision to patient  Describe options, including uncertainty  Elicit / construct preferences and values  Agree on a plan for the next steps  Benefits of shared decision making  Patients  Physicians

9 Angela Fagerlin, PhD Psychology of Medical Decision Making

10 Heuristics & Biases  Availability  Framing  Anchoring and adjustment  Default bias  Omission and action biases

11 Risk Communication  Numeracy  What it is, how bad it is, how crucial it is  Absolute vs. relative risk  Frequencies vs. percentages  Graph communication  Baseline vs. incremental risk  Less is more  The importance of labels

12 Mary Politi, PhD Decision Support Interventions Development and Evaluation

13  What are decision support interventions (DESIs)?  What have they been proven to do?  Where is more research needed?  How are DESIs developed?  How are DESIs evaluated?  How are DESIs implemented?

14 Decision Support Interventions Development and Evaluation  Resources  Development: http://decisionaid.ohri.ca/ http://decisionaid.ohri.ca/  http://ipdas.ohri.ca/ http://ipdas.ohri.ca/  Evaluation  http://ipdas.ohri.ca/ http://ipdas.ohri.ca/  IPDASi: http://www.ipdasi.org/IPDASi%20Information.pdf http://www.ipdasi.org/IPDASi%20Information.pdf

15 Karen Sepucha, PhD Decision Quality

16  Model of medical care  Inputs / Process / Outputs  Research continuum: Patient decision aids  Development  Evaluation  Implementation  Criteria for appraising survey instruments  Validity and reliability

17 Resources  OHRI common decision aid measures: https://decisionaid.ohri.ca/eval.html  NCI-GEM SDM measures and reviews: www.gem- beta.org  MGH decision quality instruments: http://www.massgeneral.org/decisionsciences/  IPDAS chapter on evaluation (BMC)  CAHPS group (SDM requirement for PCMH and ACOs): http://cahps.ahrq.gov/clinician_group/

18 Interactive Activities

19 2 Exercises  Evaluation of decision  3 groups—each received a different decision aid  Used IPDAS (checklist) criteria to evaluate the quality of the tool  Evaluation of traditional research project vs. an implementation project in routine care.  Provided handouts that describe one of the two research projects described above.  Asked participants to reflect on What is the goal of the project What are the most important outcomes/data to collect What are approaches/surveys that could assess outcomes Strengths and weaknesses of different approaches

20 How Did Learners Like Us?

21 Our Evaluations  Pretty Well…  Among the best courses I have ever taken: N = 1  A very good course w/ minor weaknesses: N = 8  A good course but significant room for improvement: N = 1  A very weak course: N = 1  10 out of 11 would recommend this course to colleagues  Interactive involvement  Too little: N = 1  Just the right amount: N = 8  Too much: N = 2

22 Comments from Evaluations  Too many speakers  Introduction too long  Not enough on heuristics and biases  Didn’t provide handouts  Disagreement on the value of the interactive exercises

23 Conclusions From Our First Attempt  Our initial attempt was too ambitious  Tried to cover too much in too little time  Needed to make sure people kept to the time limit and that we were more thoughtful about how to focus/split up the content.  It might not be feasible to teach a truly comprehensive SDM curriculum in a short course setting.  Too many subtopics, so little time.

24 Round 2: Upcoming Course  Will decrease:  Number of speakers from 4 to 3 (but due to maternity leave, only 2 will be there).  Introduction  Decision Quality  Increase  Discussion of heuristics and biases that affect medical decision making  Discussion of how to decrease these biases  Change interactive exercises

25 Course taught at New York University (2011  Currently) Development of Decision Aids

26  Process  Lecture & lab in the morning  Lecture & lab in the afternoon  Sharing of decision aid development challenges  Day 1  Background on models of patient-physician decision making.  What are decision aids? What they have been proven to do, not do?  Day 2  Literacy  Numeracy / Risk communication

27  Day 3  Preference elicitation  Tailoring  Day 4  Web-based Decision Aids  Implementation  Day 5  Survey design and evaluation  Presentation of decision aids

28 One Last Resource Slide  Mary Politi teaches a course of shared decision making and shared this link to her course and syllabus:  http://www.mphs.wustl.edu/Courses/MPHS%20Elective #M19- 560http://www.mphs.wustl.edu/Courses/MPHS%20Elec tive#M19-560 http://www.mphs.wustl.edu/Courses/MPHS%20Elective #M19- 560http://www.mphs.wustl.edu/Courses/MPHS%20Elec tive#M19-560  Paul Han (Risk Communication Module, designed for medical students)  Han et al., Development and evaluation of a risk communication curriculum. Patient Education and Counseling, 2014.

29 You Can’t Ask Me Questions (NOW)  But you can ask me later (or now, by email) fagerlin@med.umich.edu @angiefagerlin www.cbssm.med.umich.edu


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