Litcius/Paper detail

Psychometric Evaluation of the Japanese 9-Item Shared Decision-Making Questionnaire and Its Association with Decision Conflict and Patient Factors in Japanese Primary Care

Yuko Goto, Hisayuki Miura, Daisuke Son, Hidenori Arai, Levente Kriston, Isabelle Scholl, Martin Härter, Kotaro Sato, Tesshu Kusaba

2020JMA Journal53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This study aimed to verify the internal consistency and validity of the Japanese version of the 9-item Shared Decision-Making Questionnaire (SDM-Q-9) and investigate the association among patient factors, shared decision-making experienced by patients, and patients' decision conflict during the treatment decision process in primary outpatient settings in Japan. METHODS: Patients who visited a primary care outpatient unit for the first time and completed the Japanese version of SDM-Q-9 and the Decisional Conflict Scale (DCS) immediately after consultation were included. The internal consistency of SDM-Q-9 was assessed using Cronbach's alpha coefficient. Factor analysis and structural equation modeling were used to investigate structural construct validity. The relationship among patient-perceived experiences of shared decision-making, decision conflict, and patient factors was evaluated using correlation analysis. RESULTS: < 0.05), indicating a significant inverse correlation and convergent validity. Older age was positively associated with perceived support of the physician in understanding all information. CONCLUSIONS: We confirmed that the Japanese version of SDM-Q-9 was both reliable and valid for use in Japanese primary care settings. In addition, we found a clear association between shared decision-making and decisional conflict of patients.

Topics & Concepts

Cronbach's alphaConfirmatory factor analysisSpearman's rank correlation coefficientStructural equation modelingConstruct validityConvergent validityRank correlationOutpatient clinicPsychologyPrimary careMedicineClinical psychologyPsychometricsFamily medicineInternal consistencyStatisticsInternal medicineMathematicsPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsPalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
Psychometric Evaluation of the Japanese 9-Item Shared Decision-Making Questionnaire and Its Association with Decision Conflict and Patient Factors in Japanese Primary Care | Litcius