• Am J Manag Care · May 2024

    Physician preferences for an electronic lung cancer screening decision aid.

    • Orly Morgan, Julie B Schnur, Michael A Diefenbach, and Minal S Kale.
    • Division of General Internal Medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, 1 Gustave Levy Pl, Box 1087, New York, NY 10029. Email: minal.kale@mountsinai.org.
    • Am J Manag Care. 2024 May 1; 30 (6 Spec No.): SP445SP451SP445-SP451.

    ObjectiveTo present primary care physician (PCP) suggestions for design and implementation of a decision aid (DA) tool to support patient-provider shared decision-making on lung cancer screening (LCS).Study DesignSemistructured interviews were conducted with 15 PCPs at an academic medical center.MethodsThe deidentified transcripts were independently coded by 2 study interviewers and jointly reviewed every 5 interviews until we determined that data saturation had been achieved. We then identified themes in the data and selected illustrative quotes.ResultsThree main themes were identified: (1) make it brief and familiar (make the tool user-friendly and implement a similar format to other widely used DAs); (2) bring me to automation station (limit busywork; focus on the patient and on the decision); and (3) involve the patient (facilitate patient involvement in the DA with simple language, visual aids, and bullet-point takeaways).ConclusionsFindings contain concrete suggestions by PCPs to inform usable and acceptable LCS DA tool design and implementation. For an LCS DA to be most successful, PCPs emphasized that the tool must be easy to use and incorporate autopopulation functions to limit redundant patient charting.

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