AI Article Synopsis

  • Shared decisionmaking in medical contexts can enhance patient-centeredness and reduce low-value testing, yet its legal implications during adverse outcomes are underexplored.
  • A study involving 804 participants used simulations to compare perceptions of fault and liability between scenarios with varying levels of shared decisionmaking.
  • Results showed that those involved in shared decisionmaking were significantly less likely to consider legal action and held higher trust and lower blame towards their physicians after an adverse outcome, indicating potential benefits for both patient care and legal risk.

Article Abstract

Study Objective: Shared decisionmaking has been promoted as a method to increase the patient-centeredness of medical decisionmaking and decrease low-yield testing, but little is known about its medicolegal ramifications in the setting of an adverse outcome. We seek to determine whether the use of shared decisionmaking changes perceptions of fault and liability in the case of an adverse outcome.

Methods: This was a randomized controlled simulation experiment conducted by survey, using clinical vignettes featuring no shared decisionmaking, brief shared decisionmaking, or thorough shared decisionmaking. Participants were adult US citizens recruited through an online crowd-sourcing platform. Participants were randomized to vignettes portraying 1 of 3 levels of shared decisionmaking. All other information given was identical, including the final clinical decision and the adverse outcome. The primary outcome was reported likelihood of pursuing legal action. Secondary outcomes included perceptions of fault, quality of care, and trust in physician.

Results: We recruited 804 participants. Participants exposed to shared decisionmaking (brief and thorough) were 80% less likely to report a plan to contact a lawyer than those not exposed to shared decisionmaking (12% and 11% versus 41%; odds ratio 0.2; 95% confidence interval 0.12 to 0.31). Participants exposed to either level of shared decisionmaking reported higher trust, rated their physicians more highly, and were less likely to fault their physicians for the adverse outcome compared with those exposed to the no shared decisionmaking vignette.

Conclusion: In the setting of an adverse outcome from a missed diagnosis, use of shared decisionmaking may affect patients' perceptions of fault and liability.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6599569PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.annemergmed.2018.11.017DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

shared decisionmaking
48
adverse outcome
16
shared
12
decisionmaking
12
perceptions fault
12
exposed shared
12
setting adverse
8
fault liability
8
decisionmaking thorough
8
participants exposed
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!