Guest guest Posted June 22, 2006 Report Share Posted June 22, 2006 Sherri, FYI. Vicky Article discusses a paper that surveyed the general public regarding its opinions about uptake of a controversial vaccine. Willingness to assume risk depended on whether the survey respondent was considering the choice from the perspective of a patient (48% would take vaccine) or as a physician (73% would recommend that others take the vaccine). Vicky http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/20/health/20docs.html? ex=1151640000 & en=6a762c52e2ce1fea & ei=5070 June 20, 2006 In Medicine, Acceptable Risk Is in the Eye of the Beholder By NICHOLAS BAKALAR The situation is imaginary, but the dilemma it illustrates is quite real. A deadly influenza moves across the world from Asia, finally arriving on our shores. There is no cure, and your doctor tells you that you have a 10 percent chance of dying from it. An effective vaccine is widely available, made from a weakened form of the virus. But it has an unfortunate side effect: there is a 5 percent chance that a patient will die from the less serious form of the flu it can cause. Would you take the vaccine, or take your chances? What would you have your children do? If you were a doctor, would you tell a patient to get the shot? If you were the head of a large hospital, would you order the vaccine for all patients? Judging by the numbers alone, there is a clear answer to this hypothetical problem: a person is much better off taking the vaccine. But people do not always arrive at health decisions by applying mathematical models, and in some cases the numbers may be less important than other considerations. In a new study published in the June issue of the Journal of General Internal Medicine, researchers found that the answer depended on which role the person was asked to assume. Only 48 percent of the participants said they would take the vaccine themselves. But 57 percent said they would give it to their children; 63 percent said that if they were doctors they would give it to patients; and 73 percent said that if they were the medical director of a hospital they would recommend the vaccine for all patients. The risks were the same for everyone, so there was no logical reason to recommend the vaccine in some situations but not in others. Yet the more distant the patient, the more likely people were to recommend the vaccine. " Researchers have found these biases before, " said Dr. A. Ubel, the study's senior author and a professor of medicine at the University of Michigan. " People hate the risk of bringing bad things on themselves, " Dr. Ubel said, " but a sense of responsibility makes them overcome these instincts to think about what's best for others. " He added, " That may be what makes doctors feel so strongly about recommending to patients what they ought to do. " Dr. A. Redelmeier, a professor of medicine at the University of Toronto who was not involved in the study, said, " What's intriguing is that these people are sometimes unaware of the extent to which their opinions can be changed by the way the question is posed. " Doctors and their patients face choices much more confusing than the fictional vaccine problem described in Dr. Ubel's study. Determining the risks and benefits of prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment, for example, presents a series of decisions that must be made with only partial information. A positive result on the P.S.A. screening test does not distinguish between a fatal cancer and one that will be asymptomatic, so the patient is left to choose either no treatment or any of a number of different procedures that have varying degrees of effectiveness and unpleasant side effects. Should a patient get the P.S.A. screening test in the first place? If the screening test is positive, should he get a treatment that may or may not be effective, or even necessary, and that may or may not have serious side effects, like incontinence and impotence? Even a fairly sophisticated patient with an understanding of all the risks and benefits would be hard put to reach a satisfactory answer. In a paper published in the June issue of PLoS Medicine, Dr. Jerome R. Hoffman says using illustrations is helpful. Pie charts, dartboards and, best of all, roulette wheels, he suggests, communicate the complex information about the probability of a good outcome more understandably. Most doctors want patients to be fully informed and then to make their own decisions — the paternalistic " doctor knows best " model no longer predominates. Yet, said Dr. Appelbaum, a professor of psychiatry at Columbia, doctors may be going too far in their zeal to present only the facts. " Physicians who place emphasis on informed consent have mistakenly come to see this as a process in which they play only a neutral role, " Dr. Appelbaum said, " and not the role of someone who gives advice as well. Yet patients who value the information often value the advice, too, and that seems to me a very proper role for a physician to play. " http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00410.x Journal of General Internal Medicine Volume 21 Page 618 - June 2006 doi:10.1111/j.1525-1497.2006.00410.x Volume 21 Issue 6 A Matter of Perspective: Choosing for Others Differs from Choosing for Yourself in Making Treatment Decisions J. Zikmund-Fisher, PhD1,2,3, na Sarr, BS2,3, Fagerlin, PhD1,2,3, A. Ubel, MD1 BACKGROUND: Many people display omission bias in medical decision making, accepting the risk of passive nonintervention rather than actively choosing interventions (such as vaccinations) that result in lower levels of risk. OBJECTIVE: Testing whether people's preferences for active interventions would increase when deciding for others versus for themselves. RESEARCH DESIGN: Survey participants imagined themselves in 1 of 4 roles: patient, physician treating a single patient, medical director creating treatment guidelines, or parent deciding for a child. All read 2 short scenarios about vaccinations for a deadly flu and treatments for a slow-growing cancer. PARTICIPANTS: Two thousand three hundred and ninety-nine people drawn from a demographically stratified internet sample. MEASURES: Chosen or recommended treatments. We also measured participants' emotional response to our task. RESULTS: Preferences for risk-reducing active treatments were significantly stronger for participants imagining themselves as medical professionals than for those imagining themselves as patients (vaccination: 73% [physician] & 63% [medical director] vs 48% [patient], Ps<.001; chemotherapy: 68% & 68% vs 60%, Ps<.012). Similar results were observed for the parental role (vaccination: 57% vs 48%, P=.003; chemotherapy: 72% vs 60%, P<.001). Reported emotional reactions were stronger in the responsible medical professional and parental roles yet were also independently associated with treatment choice, with higher scores associated with reduced omission tendencies (OR=1.15 for both regressions, Ps<.01). CONCLUSIONS: Treatment preferences may be substantially influenced by a decision- making role. As certain roles appear to reinforce " big picture " thinking about difficult risk tradeoffs, physicians and patients should consider re-framing treatment decisions to gain new, and hopefully beneficial, perspectives. --- End forwarded message --- -------------------------------------------------------- Sheri Nakken, R.N., MA, Hahnemannian Homeopath Vaccination Information & Choice Network, Nevada City CA & Wales UK Vaccines - http://www.nccn.net/~wwithin/vaccine.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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