To assess whether a computer-based tutorial as supportive means enhances quality and efficiency of the informed consent process for cataract surgery focussing on the patients' attitude before and after surgery.
Informing the patient and obtaining informed consent is one of the major duties physicians perform before starting a medical treatment. The requirements concerning the informed consent process are high. The amount of information needed to be explained to the patient is growing, as procedures get more complex and the number of treatment options increase. The CatInfo tool is a computer-based tutorial about cataract and cataract surgery run on a handheld device with headphones and presented in an audio-visual fashion. The patient gives feedback after each chapter using a traffic light system to ensure that the content has been understood (green - content understood, ready to continue; yellow - questions that require discussion with the physician and red - repetition of the module required). A printout that summarizes what the patient has selected after each chapter immediately tells the physician which topics have been poorly understood or were unclear. It has been shown in a randomized triple-masked study that patients using the CatInfo tool were significantly better informed than patients only having a face-to-face interview. Satisfaction with the tool was high. This present study has the goal to assess the patients' attitude before and after surgery using validated questionnaires (decisional conflict scale, decision regret scale) as well as knowledge. Patients scheduled for their first eye cataract surgery are randomly allocated to two groups, receiving standard face-to-face informed consent (control group) or additionally using the interactive CatInfo tool (study group). Scores between the groups are compared.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
150
Presentation about cataract surgery
Vienna Institute for Research in Ocular Surgery (VIROS)
Vienna, Austria
Decisional conflict scale score
To assess the decisional confidence after the face-to-face informed consent discussion patients are asked to complete the decisional conflict scale questionnaire. In this study it is calculated as decisional confidence, where 0 represents the lowest decisional confidence and 100 the highest.
Time frame: Day of pre-assessment visit (1 week before surgery)
Decision regret scale score
One month after surgery the patients' satisfaction with their decision is evaluated with the decision regret scale (DRS) questionnaire via telephone interview. A score of 0 means no regret, a score of 100 high regret.
Time frame: 1 month after surgery
Number of correctly answered questions assessing knowledge
To assess the knowledge concerning cataract surgery patients are asked to complete a multiple-choice questionnaire concerning cataract surgery. The number of correctly answered questions are summed up. The scale ranges from a minimum of 0 points to a maximum of 19 points. The more points the better the patient's knowledge about cataract and cataract surgery.
Time frame: Day of pre-assessment visit (1 week before surgery)
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