OBJECTIVES: To examine the experiences among Dutch and American clinicians on the impact of using encounter patient decision aids (ePDAs) on their clinical practice, and subsequently to formulate recommendations for sustained ePDA use in clinical practice. DESIGN: Qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with clinicians who used 11 different ePDAs (applicable to their specialty) for 3 months after a short training. The verbatim transcribed interviews were coded with thematic analysis by six researchers via ATLAS.ti. SETTING: Nine hospitals in the Netherlands and two hospitals in the USA. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-five clinicians were interviewed: 16 Dutch medical specialists from four different disciplines (gynaecologists, ear-nose-thr...
OBJECTIVE: To assess how patients prefer and perceive medical decision making, which factors are ass...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Decision aids (DAs) effectively support patient decision m...
Abstract Introduction This paper explores doctor–patient and companion communication about care deci...
Objective: Decision aids (DAs) are tools to facilitate and standardize shared decision making (SDM)...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of encounter patient decision aids (PDAs) as evaluated in randomi...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Efforts to improve shared decision-making through the implementation...
Objective: To identify and classify all clinical decisions that emerged in a sample of patient–physi...
Abstract Background Tools for shared decision-making (e.g. decision aids) are intended to support he...
BACKGROUND: Decision aids can be used to support shared decision making (SDM). A patient-oriented tr...
Background: The recent emphasis on value-based health care (VBHC) is thought to provide new opportun...
Contains fulltext : 48185.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Im...
BACKGROUND: There have been significant conceptual developments regarding shared decision-making (SD...
BACKGROUND: Important barriers to the wider implementation of shared decision making remain. The exp...
Objective: To assess the extent to which (1) clinicians, using or not using conversation aids, foste...
INTRODUCTION: Shared decision-making (SDM) refers to the collaboration between patients and their he...
OBJECTIVE: To assess how patients prefer and perceive medical decision making, which factors are ass...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Decision aids (DAs) effectively support patient decision m...
Abstract Introduction This paper explores doctor–patient and companion communication about care deci...
Objective: Decision aids (DAs) are tools to facilitate and standardize shared decision making (SDM)...
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of encounter patient decision aids (PDAs) as evaluated in randomi...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Efforts to improve shared decision-making through the implementation...
Objective: To identify and classify all clinical decisions that emerged in a sample of patient–physi...
Abstract Background Tools for shared decision-making (e.g. decision aids) are intended to support he...
BACKGROUND: Decision aids can be used to support shared decision making (SDM). A patient-oriented tr...
Background: The recent emphasis on value-based health care (VBHC) is thought to provide new opportun...
Contains fulltext : 48185.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: Im...
BACKGROUND: There have been significant conceptual developments regarding shared decision-making (SD...
BACKGROUND: Important barriers to the wider implementation of shared decision making remain. The exp...
Objective: To assess the extent to which (1) clinicians, using or not using conversation aids, foste...
INTRODUCTION: Shared decision-making (SDM) refers to the collaboration between patients and their he...
OBJECTIVE: To assess how patients prefer and perceive medical decision making, which factors are ass...
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Decision aids (DAs) effectively support patient decision m...
Abstract Introduction This paper explores doctor–patient and companion communication about care deci...