Litcius/Paper detail

The role of time in involving patients with cancer in treatment decision making: A scoping review

Thomas H. Wieringa, Montserrat León‐García, Nataly R. Espinoza Suárez, María José Hernández, Cristian Soto Jacome, Yaara Zisman‐Ilani, René H.J. Otten, Víctor M. Montori, Arwen H. Pieterse

2024Patient Education and Counseling25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Time is often perceived as a barrier to shared decision making in cancer care. It remains unclear how time functions as a barrier and how it could be most effectively utilized. OBJECTIVE: This scoping review aimed to describe the role of time in patient involvement, and identify strategies to overcome time-related barriers. METHODS: Seven databases were searched for any publications on patient involvement in cancer treatment decisions, focusing on how time is used to involve patients, the association between time and patient involvement, and/or strategies to overcome time-related barriers. Reviewers worked independently and in duplicate to select publications and extract data. One coder thematically analyzed data, a second coder checked these analyses. RESULTS: The analysis of 26 eligible publications revealed four themes. Time was a resource 1) to process the diagnosis, 2) to obtain/process/consider information, 3) for patients and clinicians to spend together, and 4) for patient involvement in making decisions. DISCUSSION: Time is a resource throughout the treatment decision-making process, and generic strategies have been proposed to overcome time constraints. PRACTICE VALUE: Clinicians could co-create decision-making timelines with patients, spread decisions across several consultations, share written information with patients, and support healthcare redesigns that allocate the necessary time.

Topics & Concepts

Clinical decision makingCancer treatmentMedical decision makingMEDLINEMedicineIntensive care medicineCancerManagement scienceFamily medicineInternal medicinePolitical scienceEngineeringLawPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareCancer survivorship and carePalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues