Table 1.
Recipe categories, supporting elements, and representative key informant comments
Recipe category | Supporting elements | Representative comments |
---|---|---|
Tools |
Patient needs |
“Very few decision aids have embraced the consumer’s needs and frame of reference.” |
“Focus groups help define content. Do interviews with patients and caregivers to hear ‘what freaks them out.’” | ||
“It’s not realistic that everyone will have the conversation. You’ve got to meet people where they are.” | ||
Surgeon needs |
“A sick patient, surgeon has info, and their life is in surgeon’s hands, and many people will do anything surgeon says.” |
|
“I'm worrying about the degree to which a surgeon can extinguish or redirect something that he or she finds uncomfortable.” | ||
“Hard for the provider to divorce themselves from being the agent of a potential intervention.” | ||
Setting impact |
“Settings such as using aids in a community vs. clinic, urban vs. rural are important to look at.” |
|
“These are discussions that should be at the dinner table, not in the ICU.” | ||
“There is an impression that DNR means do not treat – particularly in surgical world because surgery is very invasive.” | ||
Ingredients |
Current aids |
“Many aids are not successful in overcoming the barriers in discussing end-of-life care such as thinking about death.” |
“Traditional decision aids are very long and no one likes to talk about death for very long.” | ||
“Videos require a remarkable amount of critical scrutiny in regards of bias and appropriate pilot testing with stakeholders.” | ||
New content |
“The absolute most important piece of paper is a medical power of attorney. This is the person who is willing to speak up and say ‘I know X and she would want . . .’” |
|
“Decision aids open up dialogue and a communicative environment where one can express things.” | ||
“Any aids that get people to know and self reflect, communicate between patient and health care provider – those are good things.” | ||
Patients’ values |
“To me it is a process where you develop a deeper understanding of where you are. It is thinking about your preferences and needs.” |
|
“Advance care planning should be a process to prepare for making potential decisions. This is more useful than considering hypothetical situations and making treatment choices.” | ||
“Advance care planning is not just whether you want a particular treatment but identifying what goals and values are important and aligning treatments with them.” | ||
Tips for success |
Keep it simple |
“Is to the point but leads to something that you can measure down the line and honors choices, so people can get the care they want at the end of life.” |
“You need an intervention that is short and sweet. For instance, is short enough to watch it there with the surgeon.” | ||
“Spectrum of aids that swings from way too general to incredible layers of micromanaging.” | ||
Make it adaptable |
“Functionality, tailoring of information are good. Will get constant feedback and have iterative changes over time.” |
|
“Describing CPR in words may be difficult for people with low health literacy to understand. Video testimonials gets around a lack in health literacy.” | ||
“Huge issue around health literacy and how to adapt aids to patients and families with low health literacy.” | ||
Show its effectiveness |
“The gold standard question to ask is, do these decision aids lead to better patient outcomes?” |
|
“Would encourage that measurement of effectiveness be highlighted a lot, but you have to measure something that matters to people who are answering the questions.” | ||
“Missing a lot of data on implementation. If something works in a study on effectiveness, how do you implement it, achieve a desired outcome, and sustain it?” |