Article
‘Best practice’ or patient choice: how can clinical guidelines and patient decision aids unite to improve patient experience and care?
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Published: | July 10, 2012 |
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Outline
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Background: Clinical guidelines present recommendations for best practice, according to the evidence-base, whereas patient decision aids (PDAs) offer the patients a series of treatment options. Can a patient make an informed choice from a single guideline recommendation? Do PDAs offer people enough information about what the evidence says results in the ‘best’ outcomes?
Objectives/Goal: To open up the debate about the relationship between PDAs and guidelines, and how these ‘products’ can work together to better enable patients to make informed decisions about their care.
Target group/Suggested audience: Guideline developers, PDA developers, clinicians, patients, researchers
Names of moderator and invited speakers:
- Trudy van der Weijden, Professor for Implementation of Clinical Practice Guidelines, University of Maastricht
- Glyn Elwyn, Professor of General Practice, Cardiff University
- Paul Chrisp, Associate Director: Accreditation, NICE
- Jane Cowl, Programme Manager: Patient & Public Involvement Programme, NICE Description of session and speaker topics: Initial short presentations from the 4 speakers (5-7 mins each) exploring:
- Role of guidelines and their relevance for a) patients and b) clinicians
- Relationship between ‘recommendations’ and ‘options’
- use of NICE guidelines and option grids as examples
- Guidelines and PDAs: what does ‘good’ look like?
Followed by an open discussion with the audience. Key questions to consider will be:
- Do patients and clinicians need different tools to support shared decision making?
- When can guidelines present ‘options’ rather than ‘recommendations’?
- Can we design and use evidence-based PDAs to complement evidence-based guidelines?