1. Patient-reported effects of hospital-wide implementation of shared decision-making at a university medical centre in Germany: a pre-post trial.
- Author
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Scheibler F, Geiger F, Wehkamp K, Danner M, Debrouwere M, Stolz-Klingenberg C, Schuldt-Joswig A, Sommer CG, Kopeleva O, Bünzen C, Wagner-Ullrich C, Koch G, Coors M, Wehking F, Clayman M, Weymayr C, Sundmacher L, and Rüffer JU
- Subjects
- Humans, Germany, Hospitals, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Decision Making, Academic Medical Centers
- Abstract
Objectives: To evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness of the SHARE TO CARE (S2C) programme, a complex intervention designed for hospital-wide implementation of shared decision-making (SDM)., Design: Pre-post study., Setting: University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein (UKSH), Kiel Campus., Participants: Healthcare professionals as well as inpatients and outpatients from 22 departments of the Kiel Campus of UKSH., Interventions: The S2C programme is a comprehensive implementation strategy including four core modules: (1) physician training, (2) SDM support training for and support by nurses as decision coaches, (3) patient activation and (4) evidence-based patient decision aid development and integration into patient pathways. After full implementation, departments received the S2C certificate., Main Outcome Measures: In this paper, we report on the feasibility and effectiveness outcomes of the implementation. Feasibility was judged by the degree of implementation of the four modules of the programme. Outcome measures for effectiveness are patient-reported experience measures (PREMs). The primary outcome measure for effectiveness is the Patient Decision Making subscale of the Perceived Involvement in Care Scale (PICS
PDM ). Pre-post comparisons were done using t-tests., Results: The implementation of the four components of the S2C programme was able to be completed in 18 of the 22 included departments within the time frame of the study. After completion of implementation, PICSPDM showed a statistically significant difference (p<0.01) between the means compared with baseline. This difference corresponds to a small to medium yet clinically meaningful positive effect (Hedges' g=0.2). Consistent with this, the secondary PREMs (Preparation for Decision Making and collaboRATE) also showed statistically significant, clinically meaningful positive effects., Conclusions: The hospital-wide implementation of SDM with the S2C-programme proved to be feasible and effective within the time frame of the project. The German Federal Joint Committee has recommended to make the Kiel model of SDM a national standard of care., Competing Interests: Competing interests: All authors received funding from the German Innovations Fund; FS, FG and JUR are co-founders of the SHARE TO CARE Patientenzentrierte Versorgung; KW received honoraria for being member of an advisory board for BMS on SDM; MC received consultancy fees from University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein LS is consultant for the Federal Ministry of Health (Germany), Federal Insurance Office and 4 statutory health insurance companies., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)- Published
- 2024
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