Department of Radiation Oncology (MAASTRO Clinic), GROW School for Oncology and Developmental Biology, Maastricht University Medical Centre+, Dr. Tanslaan 12, 6229, ET, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
Fontys University of Applied Sciences, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2019 Jul 11;19(1):130. doi: 10.1186/s12911-019-0862-4.
Patient decision aids (PDAs) can support the treatment decision making process and empower patients to take a proactive role in their treatment pathway while using a shared decision-making (SDM) approach making participatory medicine possible. The aim of this study was to develop a PDA for prostate cancer that is accurate and user-friendly.
We followed a user-centered design process consisting of five rounds of semi-structured interviews and usability surveys with topics such as informational/decisional needs of users and requirements for PDAs. Our user-base consisted of 8 urologists, 4 radiation oncologists, 2 oncology nurses, 8 general practitioners, 19 former prostate cancer patients, 4 usability experts and 11 healthy volunteers.
Informational needs for patients centered on three key factors: treatment experience, post-treatment quality of life, and the impact of side effects. Patients and clinicians valued a PDA that presents balanced information on these factors through simple understandable language and visual aids. Usability questionnaires revealed that patients were more satisfied overall with the PDA than clinicians; however, both groups had concerns that the PDA might lengthen consultation times (42 and 41%, respectively). The PDA is accessible on http://beslissamen.nl/ .
User-centered design provided valuable insights into PDA requirements but challenges in integrating diverse perspectives as clinicians focus on clinical outcomes while patients also consider quality of life. Nevertheless, it is crucial to involve a broad base of clinical users in order to better understand the decision-making process and to develop a PDA that is accurate, usable, and acceptable.
患者决策辅助工具(PDAs)可以支持治疗决策过程,并使患者能够在使用共同决策(SDM)方法的情况下积极参与其治疗途径,从而实现参与式医学。本研究的目的是开发一种准确且用户友好的前列腺癌 PDA。
我们遵循用户为中心的设计过程,包括五轮半结构化访谈和可用性调查,主题包括用户的信息/决策需求以及 PDA 的要求。我们的用户基础包括 8 名泌尿科医生、4 名放射肿瘤学家、2 名肿瘤护士、8 名全科医生、19 名前前列腺癌患者、4 名可用性专家和 11 名健康志愿者。
患者的信息需求集中在三个关键因素上:治疗体验、治疗后生活质量和副作用的影响。患者和临床医生都希望 PDA 通过简单易懂的语言和视觉辅助工具来呈现这些因素的平衡信息。可用性问卷显示,患者对 PDA 的总体满意度高于临床医生;然而,两组都担心 PDA 可能会延长咨询时间(分别为 42%和 41%)。该 PDA 可在 http://beslissamen.nl/ 上访问。
用户为中心的设计为 PDA 的要求提供了有价值的见解,但在整合不同观点方面存在挑战,因为临床医生专注于临床结果,而患者也考虑生活质量。然而,为了更好地理解决策过程并开发出准确、可用且可接受的 PDA,必须让广泛的临床用户参与进来。