Aufsatz(elektronisch)25. November 2017

Choosing Doctors Wisely: Can Assisted Choice Enhance Patients' Selection of Clinicians?

In: Medical care research and review, Band 76, Heft 5, S. 572-596

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Abstract

We conducted a simulated clinician-choice experiment, comparing choices and decision-making processes of participants ( N = 688) randomized among four experimental arms: a conventional website reporting only quantitative performance information, a website reporting both qualitative (patient comments) and quantitative information, the second website augmented by a decision aid (labeling of patient comments), and the decision-aided website further augmented by the presence of a trained navigator. Introducing patient comments enhanced engagement with the quality information but led to a decline in decision quality, particularly the consistency of choices with consumers' stated preferences. Labeling comments helped erase the decline in decision quality, although the highest percentage of preference-congruent choices was seen in the navigator arm. Engagement with the quality information and satisfaction with choices available were likewise highest in the navigator arm. Findings held for high- and low-skilled decision makers. Thus, navigator assistance may be a promising strategy for equitably promoting higher quality choices in information-rich contexts.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

SAGE Publications

ISSN: 1552-6801

DOI

10.1177/1077558717743822

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