1. Amputation or Reconstruction? Development and Validation of a Patient Decision Aid for Treatment of Severe Lower-Extremity Trauma.
- Author
-
Raymond OI, Hsu M, and Humbyrd CJ
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Plastic Surgery Procedures methods, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Leg Injuries surgery, Leg Injuries diagnosis, Leg Injuries physiopathology, Leg Injuries psychology, Patient Participation, Reproducibility of Results, Amputation, Surgical, Decision Support Techniques
- Abstract
Background: Our goal was to develop and validate the Severe Lower-Extremity Trauma decision aid (SLETRA) to help patients make treatment decisions aligned with their values regarding amputation versus reconstruction., Methods: We recruited 62 adults (41 women) from a foot and ankle practice at a US academic hospital from June to August 2020. We excluded patients who could not read in English and who lacked internet service access. Patients completed an 8-question knowledge test regarding the risks, benefits, and outcomes of treatment options before and after reviewing SLETRA. The survey presented a hypothetical case of severe lower-extremity trauma. Respondents, imagining themselves as patients, indicated whether they would choose amputation or reconstruction. We evaluated knowledge scores (maximum, 8 points); decisional conflict scores (maximum, 400 points, with higher scores indicating greater respondent difficulty in decision making); ratings of factors influencing the decision; and SLETRA helpfulness (maximum, 7 points). Pre- and post-test knowledge scores were compared using paired Student's t-tests; Alpha = 0.05., Results: Mean and standard deviation knowledge scores improved from 5.2 ± 1.6 (pre-test) to 6.7 ± 1.6 (post-test) (p < 0.001). Mean decisional conflict score was 223 ± 16, reflecting moderate difficulty. Factors affecting treatment choice were risk of complications (n = 29), recovery time (n = 27), and future prosthesis use (n = 27). No respondent had difficulty understanding SLETRA. Mean helpfulness score was 5.6 ± 0.16, reflecting considerable benefit., Conclusion: The SLETRA decision aid is a helpful, understandable tool that significantly improves patient knowledge regarding treatment options for severe lower-extremity trauma.
- Published
- 2024