Patients surviving with advanced prostate cancer frequently encounter time points in their disease course that require choosing among multiple options regarding systemic therapy. Interventions to improve shared decision-making through patient support measures such as question listing, and audio recording and summarizing of consultations have been shown to improve patient-reported measures of decision making quality, e.g. decreased decisional conflict and regret. However, the feasibility of consultation recording and summarizing with mobile health (mHealth) technology on patient-owned smartphones is unknown. The investigators will conduct a single-arm trial to determine feasibility and acceptability of a clinician-prompted, patient administered smartphone audio recording application and a service to summarize the recordings (Patient Support Corps or PSC), in improving decision-making quality among patients with chemotherapy-naive, progressive, metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). This trial will inform the design and conduct of a larger trial evaluating broader scale implementation of this intervention.
The intervention (provision of instructions on how to install/use the app and how to share the recording with the PSC) will take place 7-60 days before the upcoming oncology consultation. PSC will provide a summary within a week of the consultation. Primary Objective: To determine the percentage of enrolled participants who use a clinician-prompted, patient-administered smartphone application to create an audio recording of an outpatient oncology visit. Secondary Objectives: 1. To determine the percentage of enrolled participants who listen to the audio recording within 1 week after the visit. 2. To determine the percentage of enrolled participants who request and receive a written summary of the consultation from the Patient Support Corps within 1 week after the visit. 3. To determine whether audio recording and summarization change decision-making quality measures. 4. To determine whether audio recording and summarization change provider-reported workload and other outcomes. 5. To determine whether audio recording and summarization change the frequency of follow-up communication between participant and clinic staff. Participants will be followed via electronic medical record review for 2 weeks after consultation
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
27
Medcorder is a smartphone app that is HIPAA compliant for the use of on patient recordings of consults with healthcare providers.
University of California, San Francisco
San Francisco, California, United States
Proportion of enrolled participants who utilized the application
Proportion of enrolled participants who create a complete audio consultation recording of the appointment using the application, measured by application metrics, at 1 week post-consultation along with 95% confidence interval will be reported.
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Proportion of enrolled participants who listened to audio recording within 1 week after the visit
Proportion of enrolled participants who listen to the recording, measured by participant-reported survey at 1 week post-consultation along with 95% confidence interval will be reported.
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Proportion of enrolled participants who obtain written summary of the consultation
Proportion of enrolled participants who request and receive a written summary of the consultation from the Patient Support Corps (PSC) within 1 week after the visit along with 95% confidence interval will be reported.
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean participant-reported CollaboRATE scores
The CollaboRATE is a 3-item questionnaire developed to measure shared decision making in reference to the most recent appointment the participant may have had with the oncologist. The questions are as follows: (i) How much effort was made to help you understand your health issues? (ii) How much effort was made to listen to what matters most to you about your health is-sues? (iii) How much effort was made to include what matters most to you in choosing what to do next? Each response ranges from a score of 0-9, with a response of 0 = "No effort was made" and 9="Every effort was made". Higher total scores represent more shared decision making.
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean score of participant reported Decision Regret Scale (DRS)
The DRS is a 5-item questionnaire where participants are asked to reflect on a past decision, and then asked to indicated the extent to which they agree or disagree with the statement in the regret scale by indication a number from 1 (Strongly) to 5 (Strongly Disagree) that best indicated their level of agreement. Scores are converted to a 0-100 scale with a lower scores indicating less regret.
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean change in scores on the Informed subscale of the Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) from baseline
The "Informed" subscale of the DCS consists of 3 items which measure the degree that the participant feel informed, with scores that range from 0 (strongly agree) to 4 (Strongly disagree). Scores are summed and then converted to a scale of 0-100, with lower indicating a greater degree of feeling informed. For analyzing changes in DCS information subscale, a two-tailed paired sample t-test will be used to determine whether the mean difference between pre- and post-consultation survey scores is 0 or not.
Time frame: Baseline and up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean perceived change in work burden provider-reported workload and other outcomes
The change in work burden will be determined using a provider-reported workload survey to determine whether audio recording produced a change in work burden at 1 week post-consultation among providers with enrolled participants. There are 5 possible responses: "Decreased work", "No Change", "A little more work", "Some more work", and "A lot more work".
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean perceived change in provider-patient relationship quality
The change in provider-patient relationship quality will be determined using a provider-reported survey to determine whether audio recording produced a change in the provider patient relationship at 1 week post-consultation among providers with enrolled participants. There are 5 possible responses: "Negatively", "Somewhat Negatively", "No change", "Somewhat Positively", and "Positively".
Time frame: Up to 2 weeks after the appointment
Mean change in number of participant-initiated telephone call or portal message encounters over time
Changes in the frequency of follow-up communication between participant and clinic staff in the electronic health record from baseline (2 weeks pre-consultation to consultation) to post-consultation (consultation to 2 weeks post-consultation).
Time frame: Baseline and up to 2 weeks after the appointment
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