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Association of decision-making in spinal surgery with specialty and emotional involvement-the Indications in Spinal Surgery (INDIANA) survey

Authors :
Michael Behr
Nico Sollmann
Sandro M. Krieg
Carmen Morandell
Alexander Preuss
Bernhard Meyer
Lucia Albers
Andreas Dinkel
Source :
Acta neurochirurgica. 160(3)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Although recent trials provided level I evidence for the most common degenerative lumbar spinal disorders, treatment still varies widely. Thus, the Indications in Spinal Surgery (INDIANA) survey explores whether decision-making is influenced by specialty or personal emotional involvement of the treating specialist. Nationwide, neurosurgeons and orthopedic surgeons specialized in spine surgery were asked to answer an Internet-based questionnaire with typical clinical patient cases of lumbar disc herniation (DH), lumbar spinal stenosis (SS), and lumbar degenerative spondylolisthesis (SL). The surgeons were assigned to counsel a patient or a close relative, thus creating emotional involvement. This was achieved by randomly allocating the surgeons to a patient group (PG) and relative group (RG). We then compared neurosurgeons to orthopedic surgeons and the PG to the RG regarding treatment decision-making. One hundred twenty-two spine surgeons completed the questionnaire (response rate 78.7%). Regarding DH and SS, more conservative treatment among orthopedic surgeons was shown (DH: odds ratio [OR] 4.1, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.7–9.7, p = 0.001; SS: OR 3.9, CI 1.8–8.2, p

Details

ISSN :
09420940
Volume :
160
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Acta neurochirurgica
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3afaf8689c4e041ad39f771d633ea756