Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone

Alicia C Shillington,1 Nananda Col,2 Robert A Bailey,3 Mark A Jewell11EPI-Q, Inc., Oak Brook, IL, USA; 2Shared Decision-making Resources, Georgetown, ME, USA; 3Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC, Raritan, NJ, USAPurpose: To describe the process used to develop an evidence-based patient decision aid (PD...

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Main Authors: Shillington AC, Col N, Bailey RA, Jewell MA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-04-01
Series:Patient Preference and Adherence
Online Access:http://www.dovepress.com/development-of-a-patient-decision-aid-for-type-2-diabetes-mellitus-for-peer-reviewed-article-PPA
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spelling doaj-a104ea4a015a4357aec8971c3b4cf93d2020-11-24T22:29:10ZengDove Medical PressPatient Preference and Adherence1177-889X2015-04-012015default60961721556Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin aloneShillington ACCol NBailey RAJewell MAAlicia C Shillington,1 Nananda Col,2 Robert A Bailey,3 Mark A Jewell11EPI-Q, Inc., Oak Brook, IL, USA; 2Shared Decision-making Resources, Georgetown, ME, USA; 3Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC, Raritan, NJ, USAPurpose: To describe the process used to develop an evidence-based patient decision aid (PDA) that facilitates shared decision-making for treatment intensification in inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) consistent with International Patient Decision Aids Standards.Methods: A PDA was developed by a multidisciplinary steering committee of clinicians, patient advocate, nurse, certified diabetes educators, and decision scientist, using a systematic development process. The process included defining the PDA scope and purpose, outlining the framework, content creation, and designing for integration into clinical practice. This was accomplished through a review of the literature and publically available educational materials and input from practicing clinicians and patients during development and iteratively refining content based on input. Patients with poorly controlled T2DM on metformin considering additional medication assessed the PDA during a pilot.Results: Testing identified six preference-sensitive domains important for choosing T2DM treatment: degree of glycemic response, avoiding weight gain, hypoglycemia risk and other adverse events, avoiding injections, convenience of dose administration, blood glucose monitoring, and cost of therapy. Patient feedback guided content revision. Treatment options were offered after presenting medication class risk–benefit information and eliciting patient values, goals, and preferences. The PDA received the highest International Patient Decision Aids Standards global score to date, 88/100, with 100% of criteria fully met for the following dimensions: development process, disclosures, evaluation process, evidence quality, guidance for users, information quality, language/readability, testing, and eliciting patient values.Conclusion: A PDA was developed to help T2DM patients make decisions regarding medication choice. This approach may be applicable to other chronic conditions.Keywords: patient decision aid, shared decision-making, type 2 diabeteshttp://www.dovepress.com/development-of-a-patient-decision-aid-for-type-2-diabetes-mellitus-for-peer-reviewed-article-PPA
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shillington AC
Col N
Bailey RA
Jewell MA
spellingShingle Shillington AC
Col N
Bailey RA
Jewell MA
Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
Patient Preference and Adherence
author_facet Shillington AC
Col N
Bailey RA
Jewell MA
author_sort Shillington AC
title Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
title_short Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
title_full Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
title_fullStr Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
title_full_unstemmed Development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
title_sort development of a patient decision aid for type 2 diabetes mellitus for patients not achieving glycemic control on metformin alone
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Patient Preference and Adherence
issn 1177-889X
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Alicia C Shillington,1 Nananda Col,2 Robert A Bailey,3 Mark A Jewell11EPI-Q, Inc., Oak Brook, IL, USA; 2Shared Decision-making Resources, Georgetown, ME, USA; 3Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC, Raritan, NJ, USAPurpose: To describe the process used to develop an evidence-based patient decision aid (PDA) that facilitates shared decision-making for treatment intensification in inadequately controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) consistent with International Patient Decision Aids Standards.Methods: A PDA was developed by a multidisciplinary steering committee of clinicians, patient advocate, nurse, certified diabetes educators, and decision scientist, using a systematic development process. The process included defining the PDA scope and purpose, outlining the framework, content creation, and designing for integration into clinical practice. This was accomplished through a review of the literature and publically available educational materials and input from practicing clinicians and patients during development and iteratively refining content based on input. Patients with poorly controlled T2DM on metformin considering additional medication assessed the PDA during a pilot.Results: Testing identified six preference-sensitive domains important for choosing T2DM treatment: degree of glycemic response, avoiding weight gain, hypoglycemia risk and other adverse events, avoiding injections, convenience of dose administration, blood glucose monitoring, and cost of therapy. Patient feedback guided content revision. Treatment options were offered after presenting medication class risk–benefit information and eliciting patient values, goals, and preferences. The PDA received the highest International Patient Decision Aids Standards global score to date, 88/100, with 100% of criteria fully met for the following dimensions: development process, disclosures, evaluation process, evidence quality, guidance for users, information quality, language/readability, testing, and eliciting patient values.Conclusion: A PDA was developed to help T2DM patients make decisions regarding medication choice. This approach may be applicable to other chronic conditions.Keywords: patient decision aid, shared decision-making, type 2 diabetes
url http://www.dovepress.com/development-of-a-patient-decision-aid-for-type-2-diabetes-mellitus-for-peer-reviewed-article-PPA
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