Abstract Background Breast cancer patients face several preference-sensitive treatment decisions. Feelings such as regret or having had inadequate information about these decisions can significantly alter patient perceptions of recovery and recurrence. Numerous objective measures of decision quality (e.g., knowledge assessments, values concordance measures) have been developed; there are far fewer measures of subjective decision quality and little consensus regarding how the construct should be assessed. The current study explores the psychometric properties of a new subjective quality decision measure for breast cancer treatment that could be used for other preference sensitive decisions. ...
Practice variation in breast cancer surgery has raised concerns about the quality of treatment decis...
There are several instruments to assess how patients evaluate their medical treatment choice. These ...
Purpose: We evaluated self-report of decision quality and regret with breast cancer surgical treatm...
Abstract Background Women diagnosed with early stage (I or II) breast cancer face a highly challengi...
Background The purpose of this paper is to examine the acceptability, feasibility, reliability and v...
Women with early stage breast cancer face a multitude of decisions. The quality of a decision can be...
Background: In breast cancer, treatment decisions are challenging as patients, their families and pr...
Background: In breast cancer, treatment decisions are challenging as patients, their families and pr...
UnrestrictedResearch in the area of breast cancer treatment decision making has typically focused se...
Background: The purpose of this paper is to examine the acceptability, feasibility, reliability and ...
Background: Over 13,000 Australian women are diagnosed with breast cancer each\ud year. Women diagno...
OBJECTIVES: Decisional regret is an indicator of satisfaction with the treatment decision and can he...
Background: Over 13,000 Australian women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year. Women diagnose...
Objective To better understand medical decision making in the context of “preference sensitive care,...
© 2014 Lee et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.Background: Women diagnosed with early stage (I or II...
Practice variation in breast cancer surgery has raised concerns about the quality of treatment decis...
There are several instruments to assess how patients evaluate their medical treatment choice. These ...
Purpose: We evaluated self-report of decision quality and regret with breast cancer surgical treatm...
Abstract Background Women diagnosed with early stage (I or II) breast cancer face a highly challengi...
Background The purpose of this paper is to examine the acceptability, feasibility, reliability and v...
Women with early stage breast cancer face a multitude of decisions. The quality of a decision can be...
Background: In breast cancer, treatment decisions are challenging as patients, their families and pr...
Background: In breast cancer, treatment decisions are challenging as patients, their families and pr...
UnrestrictedResearch in the area of breast cancer treatment decision making has typically focused se...
Background: The purpose of this paper is to examine the acceptability, feasibility, reliability and ...
Background: Over 13,000 Australian women are diagnosed with breast cancer each\ud year. Women diagno...
OBJECTIVES: Decisional regret is an indicator of satisfaction with the treatment decision and can he...
Background: Over 13,000 Australian women are diagnosed with breast cancer each year. Women diagnose...
Objective To better understand medical decision making in the context of “preference sensitive care,...
© 2014 Lee et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.Background: Women diagnosed with early stage (I or II...
Practice variation in breast cancer surgery has raised concerns about the quality of treatment decis...
There are several instruments to assess how patients evaluate their medical treatment choice. These ...
Purpose: We evaluated self-report of decision quality and regret with breast cancer surgical treatm...