No registrations found.
ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
In English: treatment restrictions; advanced care planning
In Dutch: behandelbeperkingen, behandelwensen en -grenzen
Sponsors and support
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
Patient satisfaction about the conversation with the doctor, patient-doctor relationship (PDRQ-9 questionnaire), doctor’s satisfaction about the conversation
Secondary outcome
Quantitative analysis: decisional conflict (Decisional Evaluation Scale), shared decision-making (SDM-9-Doc), gender differences in previously mentioned outcomes
Qualitative analysis: quality of the conversation on treatment restrictions, gender differences in communication styles regarding the conversation on treatment restrictions
Background summary
Timely discussing treatment restrictions with patients is important in order to prevent difficult situations at, for example, the emergency department. Nowadays, patients are often uninformed about the possibilities and consequences of resuscitation, mechanical ventilation and intensive care admission. This makes it hard or even impossible to decide about whether these interventions should be performed whenever they become necessary, especially in an urgent medical situation. Doctors, however, find it difficult to discuss potential treatment restrictions with patients. We hypothesize that routinely discussing potential treatment restrictions with patients at the outpatient clinic, in a less stressful environment with their ‘own’ physician, leads to better informed patients, more patient and doctor satisfaction about this conversation and more shared decision-making. Furthermore, it is important to gain more insight in the role of gender differences in communication style regarding the discussion on potential treatment restrictions.
Study objective
We hypothesize that a conversation aid and information brochure for patients, and a communication training for physicians improves satisfaction and quality of the discussion about potential treatment restrictions at the internal medicine outpatient department. Moreover, our hypothesis is that gender differences in communication style play a role in this association.
Study design
Patients and physicians will receive a questionnaire about the consultation at the outpatient department immediately after the consultation.
Intervention
Patients will receive a digital information brochure and conversational aid. Doctors will be trained with simulated patients and an e-learning module.
Heidelberglaan 100
Utrecht 3584 CX
The Netherlands
088 755 5555
m.a.dewinter-6@umcutrecht.nl
Heidelberglaan 100
Utrecht 3584 CX
The Netherlands
088 755 5555
m.a.dewinter-6@umcutrecht.nl
Inclusion criteria
All new patients or known patients (>18 years) with whom potential treatment restrictions have not been discussed, that are scheduled for a visit at the internal medicine outpatient clinic are eligible for inclusion.
Exclusion criteria
Patients with whom treatment restrictions have been extensively discussed prior to this study, patients who are unable to give informed consent and patients with insufficient command of the Dutch language in order to complete the patient education and questionnaires will be excluded.
Design
Recruitment
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
No registrations found.
In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL6998 |
NTR-old | NTR7188 |
CCMO | NL64774.029.18 |
OMON | NL-OMON55962 |