Reconstructive surgery is advocated for most children with hypospadias, a condition in which the pee hold is not in the correct place on the penis, to prevent potentially serious cosmetic and functional problems. Parents faced with a decision about hypospadias repair encounter an irreversible choice with potentially lifelong consequences. Recent studies have identified decisional conflict (DC) and decisional regret (DR) as a significant problem for parents. Several recent guidelines on complex urologic topics suggest that shared decision-making (SDM) is the optimal approach. A pilot test of a decision aid website by parents potentially facing this decision will be conducted to measure pre- and post-outcomes, in order to develop a fuller understanding of how urologists can effectively provide parents with optimal decision support. Parents will answer questions via phone up to four time points, twice before (T1 and T2) and twice after seeing a urologist for a hypospadias referral (T3 and T4). If the urologist diagnoses hypospadias but recommends no surgery, the final data collection point will be three months after the urology visit. If the urologist recommends repair surgery, the final data collection point will be six months after surgery.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
65
The (private) decision aid website contains information in text, graphic, and video form about hypospadias and considerations for choosing surgery and no surgery.
Indiana University
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
UNC
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Percent of Eligible Parents Screened (Feasibility)
Recruitment is defined as the number of potential participants who are eligible divided by the total number screened multiplied by 100.
Time frame: Baseline (T1)
Percent of Eligible Parents Enrolled (Feasibility)
The number of parents enrolled divided by the total number of parents who were eligible multiplied by 100.
Time frame: Baseline (T1)
Decision Aid Acceptability by Categories of Information, Length, Clarity, and Balance (Acceptability)
Acceptability of a decision aid refers to ratings regarding the comprehensibility of components of a decision aid, its length, clarity, amount of information, and balance in presentation of information about options. The tool has 4 questions with answers on a Likert scale ranging from 1-5 (length, amount of information, and balance) and 1-4 (clarity). A response of 3 is ideal for information, length, and balance and a response of 1 is ideal for clarity.
Time frame: Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
Percentage of Parents Retained in the Study (Feasibility)
Number of parents who completed the study divided by the number of eligible parents enrolled who completed the study multiplied by 100.
Time frame: T1 to T4, a total of approximately 6 months
Mean Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) Score at T1 and T2
The Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) measures personal perceptions of uncertainty in choosing options, modifiable factors contributing to uncertainty such as feeling uninformed, unclear about personal values and unsupported in decision making, and effective decision making (in full version) such as feeling the choice is informed, values-based, likely to be implemented and expressing satisfaction with the choice. This study utilizes the full version, a Likert-type scale consisting of 16 questions and answer options of strongly agree to strongly disagree. Total scores range from 0-100, a higher score means more decisional conflict.
Time frame: Baseline (T1), Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
Mean Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) Score at T2 and T3
The Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) measures personal perceptions of uncertainty in choosing options, modifiable factors contributing to uncertainty such as feeling uninformed, unclear about personal values and unsupported in decision making, and effective decision making (in full version) such as feeling the choice is informed, values-based, likely to be implemented and expressing satisfaction with the choice. This study utilizes the full version, a Likert-type scale consisting of 16 questions and answer options of strongly agree to strongly disagree. Total scores range from 0-100, a higher score means more decisional conflict. Time frame revised to address original entry error.
Time frame: Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2), Initial post-consultation, within 48 hours of urology visit (T3)
Mean Decision-Specific Knowledge Scores
Decision-Specific Knowledge is a six-question tool with multiple choice question and answer options created by the investigator to measure pre/post knowledge of hypospadias and repair surgery. Total scores range from 0-100% with a higher score indicating more correct answers.
Time frame: Baseline (T1), Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
Mean Decisional Regret Scale Score
The Decision Regret Scale measures distress or remorse after a decision. Brehaut's (2003) 5-item scale has scores ranging from 0-100, where 100 indicates maximal regret, and 0 indicates no regret.
Time frame: 3-month post-consultation (T4)
Hypospadias Treatment Preference by Category at T1 and T2
This is a single question created by the investigator asking "Do you intend for your son to have hypospadias surgery?" with yes/no/unsure answer options to measure a change in response, or not, after viewing the decision aid website.
Time frame: Baseline (T1), Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
Hypospadias Treatment Preference by Category at T2 and T3
This is a single question created by the investigator asking "Do you intend for your son to have hypospadias surgery?" with yes/no/unsure answer options to measure a change in response, or not, after viewing the decision aid website.
Time frame: Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2), Initial post-consultation, within 48 hours of urology visit (T3)
Awareness of Decision by Category at T1 and T2
This is a single question created by the investigator asking "Is there a decision to make about whether your son should have surgery for his hypospadias?" with yes/no/unsure answer options to measure a change in awareness of decision, or not, after viewing the decision aid website.
Time frame: Baseline (T1), Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
Awareness of Decision by Category at T2 and T3
This is a single question created by the investigator asking "Is there a decision to make about whether your son should have surgery for his hypospadias?" with yes/no/unsure answer options to measure a change in awareness of decision, or not, after viewing the decision aid website.
Time frame: Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2), Initial post-consultation, within 48 hours of urology visit (T3)
Mean Shared Decision Making Questionnaire Score
The Shared Decision Making Questionnaire measures the decisional process in medical encounters from both the patient and the physician perspectives. The questionnaire contains 9 questions with answers on a 6-point Likert scale. Scores range from 0-100 with higher scores indicating a higher perceived level of shared decision making.
Time frame: Initial post-consultation, within 48 hours of urology visit (T3)
Mean Preparation for Decision Making Score
The Preparation for Decision Making scale (Prep-DM) scale assesses a patient's perception of how useful a decision aid or other decision support intervention is in preparing the respondent to communicate with their practitioner at a consultation focused on making a health decision. The scale contains 10 questions with answers on a Likert Scale Scores range from 0-100 with higher scores indicating a higher perceived level of preparation for decision making.
Time frame: Pre-consultation, 1 week after baseline (T2)
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