• Patient Educ Couns · Aug 2012

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Development of PRIDe: a tool to assess physicians' preference of role in clinical decision making.

    • Anik Giguère, Michel Labrecque, Merlin Njoya, Robert Thivierge, and France Légaré.
    • Health Information Research Unit, Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. anikgiguere@videotron.ca
    • Patient Educ Couns. 2012 Aug 1;88(2):277-83.

    ObjectiveTo develop and evaluate items for inclusion in PRIDe (Preferred Role in Decision Making), a new tool to assess changes of role preference among professionals exposed to training in shared decision making (SDM).MethodsThis study was part of a pilot trial to evaluate the effectiveness of SDM training on the doctors' prescription of antibiotics for acute respiratory infections. Thirty-nine family physicians were randomized to immediate exposure to training or to delayed exposure. Potential items for PRIDe and a questionnaire about physicians' intention to engage in SDM were administered at baseline and at follow-up.ResultsFollowing analysis, we retained five items that captured a change in physicians' preference. The items' scores were pooled and the resulting tool showed limited internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha = 0.41) but significant test-retest reliability (immediate group: P = 0.03; delayed group: P = 0.008) and acceptable discriminant validity, with patients involved in decision making more actively after training than before (Fisher's test, P = .02).ConclusionThis initial step to develop an evaluation tool to assess changes in doctors' preference of role in decision making following SDM training shows promising results. The next step is to develop more clinical vignettes followed by questions inspired from this analysis.Practice ImplicationsThe PRIDe instrument can be used in the assessment of health professionals' attitude towards shared decision making after training in shared decision making. Additional research is needed to evaluate its validity before it can be recommended for use.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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