Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3814711 Patient Education and Counseling 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveAs part of a study of men's responses to a videotape decision aid [Rovner DR, Wills CE, Bonham V, Williams G, Lillie J, Kelly-Blake K, Williams MV, Holmes-Rovner M. Decision aids for benign prostatic hyperplasia: applicability across race and education. Med Decis Making 2004;24:359–66], preferences for BPH treatment options were assessed.MethodsOne hundred and sixty men stratified by race and education completed a semi-structured interview that included assessments of treatment preferences.ResultsMost men initially and ultimately favored watchful waiting over other options, and 56.6% never changed their preference rank orders while viewing the videotape. BPH severity in context of treatment risk avoidance, efficacy, and expert opinion factors were frequently cited reasons for preference orders. Lesser education was associated with higher likelihood of changing preferences (r = −.30, p < .001), and percent increase in BPH knowledge pre- to post-videotape was weakly associated with fewer non-dominant preference shifts (r = −.19, p < .05).ConclusionConservatism regarding BPH treatment is moderated by context-specific factors, including new information.Practice implicationCounseling in a provider–patient partnership model should address both sources of variance in men's treatment preferences.

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