The SDM-DC intervention is designed for patients with kidney failure who must make a decision regarding type of dialysis: haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. SDM-DC consists of patient and his or her relative(s) being given a patient decision aid called 'Dialysis choice' and booked for meetings with a dialysis coordinator.
The dialysis coordinators were trained in the why, what and how in relation to SDM-DC and to deliver the intervention by tailoring to patients' needs and using three different communication skills: mirroring, active listening and value clarification. The patient decision aid was designed to be utilised during and between the SDM-DC meetings. The patient decision aid is in paper format and consists of a set of tools: a decision map, an overview of uremic symptoms, an overview of options, and the Ottawa Personal Decision Guide. More specifically, the patient decision aid makes explicit the dialysis decision, describes options, benefits and harms using the best available evidence, and intends to help patients clarify their values by indicating the importance of the benefits and harms out of scale from (0) to (5). Four videos with personal stories were available to be shown and discussed at the meetings if the patient preferred to see the reason why another patient has chosen a specific option. Each video showed one option with a patient telling why he/she chose that option, and how he/she weighed the advantages and disadvantages.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
402
The SDM-DC intervention is designed for patients with kidney failure who must make a decision regarding type of dialysis: haemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis. SDM-DC consists of patient and his or her relative(s) being given a patient decision aid called 'Dialysis choice' and booked for meetings with a dialysis coordinator. There were optional videos describing other patients' experiences making this decision. The dialysis coordinators were trained in the why, what and how in relation to SDM-DC and to deliver the intervention by tailoring to patients' needs and using three different communication skills: mirroring, active listening and value clarification.
Patients experiences of a shared decision-making process
Shared decision-making questionnaire was used to measure patients' perception of shared decision-making in the clinical encounter. It consists of nine statements to be rated on a six-point scale from 'completely disagree' (0) to 'completely agree' (5) The quality of the decision-making process was calculated as the mean score for each item in the SDM-Q9. To provide a total score of the SDM-Q9 a sum of all items was calculated and standardized on a scale on 0-100.
Time frame: 14 days after interventions
Knowledge, readiness for decision-making and decision quality
Decision Quality Measurement was used to measure the quality of the decision. The questionnaire consists of six knowledge statements and six readiness statements. All items on the questionnaire were rated as yes, no or unsure. It also consists of two open questions. A total knowledge and readiness score was calculated and standardized out of 100. Open questions were analysed using descriptive qualitative analysis and reported based on most common to least common comments. We decided that for a home-based treatment and choosing 'Treatment at home' in the preference question or deciding for a hospital-based treatment and not choosing 'Treatment at home' in the preference question were considered as concordant choices. Decision quality was defined as a knowledge score \>66% on the knowledge score and combined with the concordance score.
Time frame: 14 days after interventions
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.