Litcius/Paper detail

When a Patient Regrets Having Undergone a Carefully and Jointly Considered Treatment Plan, How Should Her Physician Respond?

Luke V. Selby, Christopher T. Aquina, Timothy M. Pawlik

2020The AMA Journal of Ethic11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Shared decision making is best utilized when a decision is preference sensitive. However, a consequence of choosing between one of several reasonable options is decisional regret: wishing a different decision had been made. In this vignette, a patient chooses mastectomy to avoid radiotherapy. However, postoperatively, she regrets the more disfiguring operation and wishes she had picked the other option: lumpectomy and radiation. Although the physician might view decisional regret as a failure of shared decision making, the physician should reflect on the process by which the decision was made. If the patient's wishes and values were explored and the decision was made in keeping with those values, decisional regret should be viewed as a consequence of decision making, not necessarily as a failure of shared decision making.

Topics & Concepts

Plan (archaeology)MedicinePsychologyHistoryArchaeologyPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcarePalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesBRCA gene mutations in cancer