1. A pre-post study testing a lung cancer screening decision aid in primary care
- Author
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Alison T. Brenner, Laura Cubillos, Bailey Minish, Russell Harris, Michael Pignone, and Daniel S. Reuland
- Subjects
Male ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lung Neoplasms ,Decision Making ,Health Informatics ,Medicare ,lcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics ,01 natural sciences ,Health informatics ,Decision Support Techniques ,Cancer screening ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Decision aids ,Pulmonary diseases ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,0101 mathematics ,Overdiagnosis ,Lung cancer ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Shared decision making ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Primary Health Care ,Medicaid ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Medical record ,010102 general mathematics ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Primary care ,United States ,3. Good health ,Computer Science Applications ,Family medicine ,lcsh:R858-859.7 ,Female ,business ,Lung cancer screening ,Follow-Up Studies ,Research Article - Abstract
The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) issued recommendations for older, heavy lifetime smokers to complete annual low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) scans of the chest as screening for lung cancer. The USPSTF recommends and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services require shared decision making using a decision aid for lung cancer screening with annual LDCT. Little is known about how decision aids affect screening knowledge, preferences, and behavior. Thus, we tested a lung cancer screening decision aid video in screening-eligible primary care patients. We conducted a single-group study with surveys before and after decision aid viewing and medical record review at 3 months. Participants were active patients of a large US academic primary care practice who were current or former smokers, ages 55–80 years, and eligible for screening based on current screening guidelines. Outcomes assessed pre-post decision aid viewing were screening-related knowledge score (9 items about screening-related harms of false positives and overdiagnosis, likelihood of benefit; score range = 0–9) and preference (preferred screening vs. not). Screening behavior measures, assessed via chart review, included provider visits, screening discussion, LDCT ordering, and LDCT completion within 3 months. Among 50 participants, knowledge increased from pre- to post-decision aid viewing (mean = 2.6 vs. 5.5, difference = 2.8; 95% CI 2.1, 3.6, p
- Published
- 2018
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