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Shared Decision Making: Prostate Cancer Screening

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Prostate Cancer
Interventions
Behavioral: Shared decision-making for PSA screening tool
Registration Number
NCT00207649
Lead Sponsor
Lisa Richarson
Brief Summary

Interventions to Improve Shared Decision-Making: Prostate Cancer Screening is a prospective study of educational interventions to improve the interaction of physicians and their patients about prostate cancer screening. Educational material is provided in primary care practices using either standard paper information or a novel web-based interactive curriculum that explores the risks and benefits of screening measures for prostate cancer for older men. The impact of the intervention on shared decision-making with both actual and standardized patients will be assessed.

Detailed Description

Prostate cancer is an important cause of death and disability in US men, but the value of screening for the disease with the prostate specific antigen (PSA) test remains highly controversial. Many primary care physicians use PSA testing routinely, with little patient counseling. Interventions to Improve Shared Decision-Making: Prostate Cancer Screening is a prospective study of educational interventions to improve shared decision-making of physicians and their patients about prostate cancer screening. Physicians will be randomized by practice site to receive standard informational brochures (control group) or a novel web-based interactive curriculum that provides education about prostate cancer screening, including potential benefits and harms, fundamentals of effective patient counsel, and shared decision-making. In addition, patients at intervention sites will be randomized to receive either the brochure or a patient-oriented interactive curriculum covering content similar to that contained in the physician tool. The intervention will be evaluated among 140 physicians within a variety of primary care settings (i.e., University-based clinics, staff-model managed care clinics, and military affiliated outpatient clinics). Approximately 10-15 actual patients of each participating physician will complete a post-visit questionnaire describing their discussion with their doctor about prostate cancer, PSA, and their decision about whether to be screened. Physicians in all groups will also see one unannounced standardized patient (SP) trained to portray a patient interested in discussing PSA. Study groups will be compared on the extent of shared decision-making they engage in with both actual and standardized patients. Pre- and post-study changes in physician knowledge and attitudes about PSA as well as the physicians' pre- and post-study PSA test ordering rates will be ascertained.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
641
Inclusion Criteria
  • Physicians in primary care practice settings with male patients age 50-75
Exclusion Criteria
  • None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Web curriculum for physicians onlyShared decision-making for PSA screening toolBoth intervention arms will use a novel web-based interactive curriculum that provides education about prostate cancer screening, including potential benefits and harms, fundamentals of effective patient counsel, and shared decision-making. In one of the intervention arms, the physicians saw the web-based interactive curriculum and the patient received the brochure.
Web curriculum for physicians and patientsShared decision-making for PSA screening toolIn the other intervention arm, the physicians saw the web-based curriculum and the patient received interactive curriculum covering content similar to that contained in the web-based interactive curriculum for physicians.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Intervention groups (physician education only, both physician and patient education) vs. control group comparison of physician shared decision-making (SDM) behaviors (self-reported SDM and SDM reported by actual and standardized patients)study period
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1.Pre- and post-study changes in physician knowledge and attitudes about PSAstudy period
2.Pre- and post-study changes in physicians' PSA ordering behavior for their patients age 50-75 yearsstudy period
3.Patients post-visit knowledge and attitudes about PSAstudy period

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of California Davis, Center for Health Services Research

🇺🇸

Sacramento, California, United States

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