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Title: Effectiveness of a decision aid for patients with depression: A randomized controlled trial. Author: Perestelo-Perez L, Rivero-Santana A, Sanchez-Afonso JA, Perez-Ramos J, Castellano-Fuentes CL, Sepucha K, Serrano-Aguilar P. Journal: Health Expect; 2017 Oct; 20(5):1096-1105. PubMed ID: 28295915. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Shared decision making is an important component of patient-centred care and decision aids are tools designed to support patients' decision making and help patients with depression to make informed choices. OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to assess the effectiveness of a web-based decision aid for patients with unipolar depression. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Adults diagnosed with a major depressive disorder and recruited in primary care centres were included and randomized to the decision aid (n=68) or usual care (n=79). INTERVENTION: Patients in the decision aid group reviewed the decision aid accompanied by a researcher. OUTCOME MEASURES: Knowledge about treatment options, decisional conflict, treatment intention and preference for participation in decision making. We also developed a pilot measure of concordance between patients' goals and concerns about treatment options and their treatment intention. RESULTS: Intervention significantly improved knowledge (P<.001) and decisional conflict (P<.001), and no differences were observed in treatment intention, preferences for participation, or concordance. One of the scales developed to measure goals and concerns showed validity issues. CONCLUSION: The decision aid "Decision making in depression" is effective improving knowledge of treatment options and reducing decisional conflict of patients with unipolar depression. More research is needed to establish a valid and reliable measure of concordance between patients' goals and concerns regarding pharmacological and psychological treatment, and the choice made.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]