PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Clinicians' involvement of patients in decision making. A video based comparison of their behavior in public vs. private practice.

  • Nicole Mongilardi,
  • Víctor Montori,
  • Alejandro Riveros,
  • Antonio Bernabé-Ortiz,
  • Javier Loza,
  • Germán Málaga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0058085
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
p. e58085

Abstract

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BackgroundLittle is known about the extent to which Peruvian physicians seek to involve patients in shared decision making, or about the variation in these efforts across different settings.ObjectiveTo measure the extent to which Peruvian clinicians involve their patients in decision making and to explore the differences between clinicians' behavior in private vs. public practice.DesignVideographic analysis.Participants and settingSeven academic physicians who provided care to patients in a public and a private setting participate in this study. All the encounters in both settings were filmed on one random day of February 2012.ApproachTwo raters, working independently and in duplicate used the 12-item OPTION scale to quantify the extent of physician effort to involve patients in shared decision making (with 0 indicating no effort and 100 maximum possible effort) in 58 video recordings of usual clinical encounters in private and public practice.ResultsThe mean OPTION score was 14.3 (SD 7.0). Although the OPTION score in the private setting (mean 16.5, SD 7.3) was higher than in the public setting (mean 12.3 SD 6.1) this difference was not statistically significant (p = .09).ConclusionPeruvian academic physicians in this convenience sample barely sought to involve their patients in shared decision making. Additional studies are required to confirm these results which suggest that patient-centered care remains an unfulfilled promise and a source of inequity within and across the private and the public sectors in Peru.