Patient-Physician Concordance for Quantitative Formats and Treatment Options and the Relationship with State Anxiety
Autor: | Alicia J. Smallwood, Cindy M. Walker, Marilyn M. Schapira, Joan M. Neuner, Kathlyn E. Fletcher |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
business.industry medicine.medical_treatment Concordance Lumpectomy Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health medicine.disease 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Breast cancer Oncology 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Internal medicine medicine Anxiety Observational study 030212 general & internal medicine Hormone therapy Stage (cooking) medicine.symptom business Mastectomy |
Zdroj: | Journal of Cancer Education. 37:1684-1690 |
ISSN: | 1543-0154 0885-8195 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13187-021-02013-2 |
Popis: | Patient-physician concordance about topics discussed in a clinic visit is essential for effective communication but may be difficult to achieve in cancer care. We conducted a multicenter, observational study at two Midwestern oncology clinics. A sample of 48 English-speaking or Spanish-speaking women with newly diagnosed stage 0–3 breast cancer completed surveys before and after a visit with an oncologist. Patient-physician dyads were coded as concordant if both patient and physician follow-up self-reports agreed whether (or not) specific treatments were discussed (i.e., treatment option concordance; mastectomy, lumpectomy, hormone therapy, neoadjuvant, and adjuvant chemotherapy) and whether risk was described using certain quantitative formats (i.e., quantitative format concordance; percentages, proportions out of 100 and 1000, graphs, pictures, evidence from clinical studies, cancer stage). Agreement was determined using percent agreement and prevalence-adjusted bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK). Pearson’s correlations were used to determine relationships between anxiety and each measure concordance. Percent concordance was higher for treatment concordance (73.3%) compared to quantitative format concordance (64.5%), and PABAK scores tended to be higher for treatment options (PABAK = .21–.78). Both treatment and quantitative format concordance were negatively associated with pre-visit state anxiety, but only treatment concordance was statistically significant (treatment: r = − .504, p = .001; quantitative format: r = − .096, p = .523). Our study indicates moderate patient-physician concordance in early breast cancer care communication and that patient anxiety may impact the ability for patients and physicians to agree on the content communicated in a clinic visit. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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