Should patients have control over their own health care?: Empirical evidence and research issues

Available research indicates that purported patient insufficiences in ability to process information and make rational and reliable decisions have likely been overestimated. Furthermore, data indicate that nonscientific factors often play a role in physician decision-making and that physicians may not value different health outcomes in the same way as patients. Though the data on patient cognitive functioning are limited because of heavy reliance on patient responses in hypothetical versus actual decision-making situations, these findings lend credence to arguments that patients should have increased control over their own health care. Research on the effects of interventions designed to enhance patient control indicates that: (a) patients generally respond positively to increased information, but few studies have evaluated the effects of information as a precursor to decision-making; (b) the few studies using simple behavioral control interventions have shown generally positive effects on a range of patient outcomes; and (c) studies of decisional control (with breast cancer patients) have had experimental confounds which prohibit conclusions regarding effectiveness. Areas in greatest need of research includes: (a) further exploration of the utility of noninvasive behavioral control interventions in different settings; (b) measuring the impact of control manipulations on patient perception of control as well as patient control-related behaviors; (c) matching patient differences in desire for control to experimental conditions and to physician differences in receptiveness to patient control; and (d) clinical trials in which patients facing critical decisions in trade-off situations are actually given a choice.

[1]  A. O'Connor,et al.  Effects of framing and level of probability on patients' preferences for cancer chemotherapy. , 1989, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[2]  T. Marteau,et al.  Framing of information: its influence upon decisions of doctors and patients. , 1989, The British journal of social psychology.

[3]  J. Deich,et al.  Self-Efficacy as a Moderator of Perceived Control Effects on Cardiovascular Reactivity: Is Enhanced Control Always Beneficial? , 1995, Psychosomatic medicine.

[4]  P. Schwartz,et al.  Psychosocial benefits of a cancer support group , 1986, Cancer.

[5]  D. Streiner,et al.  Patients' preferences for therapy in advanced epithelial ovarian cancer: development, testing, and application of a bedside decision instrument. , 1996, Gynecologic oncology.

[6]  A. Tversky,et al.  On the elicitation of preferences for alternative therapies. , 1982, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  Bilodeau Ba,et al.  Information needs, sources of information, and decisional roles in women with breast cancer. , 1996 .

[8]  H. Muss,et al.  Patient preferences for treatment of metastatic breast cancer: a study of women with early-stage breast cancer. , 1995, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[9]  J. V. Wood,et al.  Attributions, beliefs about control, and adjustment to breast cancer. , 1984, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[10]  H. Fineberg Clinical evaluation: how does it influence medical practice? , 1987, Bulletin du cancer.

[11]  Barriers to informed consent. , 1983, Annals of internal medicine.

[12]  F. Stockdale,et al.  Behavior of cancer patients: A randomized study of the effects of education and peer support groups , 1983, American journal of clinical oncology.

[13]  B. McNeil,et al.  Determinants of Physicians’ Preferences for Alternative Treatments in Women with Early Breast Cancer , 1987, Tumori.

[14]  W. Gregory,et al.  Attitudes to chemotherapy: comparing views of patients with cancer with those of doctors, nurses, and general public. , 1990, BMJ.

[15]  B Fischhoff,et al.  Informed consent does not mean rational consent. Cognitive limitations on decision-making. , 1990, The Journal of legal medicine.

[16]  T. Starr,et al.  Quality of life and resuscitation decisions in elderly patients , 1986, Journal of general internal medicine.

[17]  C. Turner,et al.  Type of hemodialysis and preference for behavioral involvement: interactive effects on adherence in end-stage renal disease. , 1990, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[18]  J. de Haes,et al.  Tradeoffs between Quality and Quantity of Life , 1996, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[19]  S. Kaplan,et al.  Expanding patient involvement in care. Effects on patient outcomes. , 1985, Annals of internal medicine.

[20]  W. Mackillop,et al.  Does knowledge guide practice? Another look at the management of non-small-cell lung cancer. , 1995, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[21]  D A Redelmeier,et al.  Understanding patients' decisions. Cognitive and emotional perspectives. , 1993, JAMA.

[22]  P Maguire,et al.  Psychological effects of being offered choice of surgery for breast cancer , 1994, BMJ.

[23]  V. Helgeson Moderators of the relation between perceived control and adjustment to chronic illness. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[24]  K. Cain,et al.  Understanding of elderly patients' resuscitation preferences by physicians and nurses. , 1989, The Western journal of medicine.

[25]  B. O'Sullivan,et al.  Controversies in the management of non-small cell lung cancer: the results of an expert surrogate study. , 1990, Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology.

[26]  J. de Haes,et al.  Doctor-patient communication: a review of the literature. , 1995, Social science & medicine.

[27]  R. Kaplan,et al.  Relationship of general advance directive instructions to specific life-sustaining treatment preferences in patients with serious illness. , 1992, Archives of internal medicine.

[28]  J. Suls,et al.  Effects of sensory and procedural information on coping with stressful medical procedures and pain: a meta-analysis. , 1989, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[29]  H A Llewellyn-Thomas,et al.  Physicians' opinions about decision aids for patients considering systemic adjuvant therapy for axillary-node negative breast cancer. , 1997, Patient education and counseling.

[30]  T. Delbanco,et al.  Choices about cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the hospital. When do physicians talk with patients? , 1984, The New England journal of medicine.

[31]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: analysis of decision under risk , 1979 .

[32]  R. Owens,et al.  Threat and loss in breast cancer , 1989, Psychological Medicine.

[33]  R B Howard,et al.  Physician-patient relationships. The dawn of a new era. , 1985, Postgraduate medicine.

[34]  H A Llewellyn-Thomas,et al.  The assessment of values in laryngeal cancer: reliability of measurement methods. , 1984, Journal of chronic diseases.

[35]  M. Enkin,et al.  Do practice guidelines guide practice? The effect of a consensus statement on the practice of physicians. , 1989, The New England journal of medicine.

[36]  R. Elashoff,et al.  A structured psychiatric intervention for cancer patients. II. Changes over time in immunological measures. , 1990, Archives of general psychiatry.

[37]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect Theory : An Analysis of Decision under Risk Author ( s ) : , 2007 .

[38]  T. C. Wade Patients May Not Recall Disclosure of Risk of Death: Implications for Informed Consent , 1990, Medicine, science, and the law.

[39]  M. Lippman,et al.  Breast conservation versus mastectomy: distress sequelae as a function of choice. , 1989, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[40]  T. J. Meyer,et al.  Effects of psychosocial interventions with adult cancer patients: a meta-analysis of randomized experiments. , 1995, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[41]  P. Ubel,et al.  Informed consent. From bodily invasion to the seemingly mundane. , 1996, Archives of internal medicine.

[42]  R. Kaplan Shared medical decision-making: A new paradigm for behavioral medicine—1997 presidential address , 1999, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[43]  B A Schulman,et al.  Active Patient Orientation and Outcomes in Hypertensive Treatment: Application of a Socio-Organizational Perspective , 1979, Medical care.

[44]  J. Evans,et al.  Patients' choices and perceptions after an invitation to participate in treatment decisions. , 1992, Social science & medicine.

[45]  E. Emanuel,et al.  Advance Directives: Stability of Patients' Treatment Choices , 1994 .

[46]  M. Brundage,et al.  Locally advanced non-small cell lung cancer: do we know the questions? A survey of randomized trials from 1966-1993. , 1996, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[47]  D. Shapiro,et al.  Controlling ourselves, controlling our world. Psychology's role in understanding positive and negative consequences of seeking and gaining control. , 1996, The American psychologist.

[48]  J. Averill Personal control over aversive stimuli and its relationship to stress. , 1973 .

[49]  I. Altman,et al.  Handbook of environmental psychology , 1987 .

[50]  P. M. Jonsson,et al.  Management of Early Prostatic Cancer in the Nordic Countries: Variations in Clinical Policies and Physicians' Attitudes Toward Radical Treatment Options , 1995, International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care.

[51]  B. McNeil,et al.  Fallacy of the five-year survival in lung cancer. , 1978, The New England journal of medicine.

[52]  Remembering ‘bad news’ consultations: An evaluation of tape‐recorded consultations , 1992 .

[53]  C. Stocking,et al.  Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and life-sustaining therapy: patients' desires for information, participation in decision making, and life-sustaining therapy. , 1991, Mayo Clinic proceedings.

[54]  R. Street,et al.  Patient Participation in Deciding Breast Cancer Treatment and Subsequent Quality of Life , 1997, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[55]  L. Mercuri,et al.  Anxiety, information, interpersonal impacts, and adjustment to a stressful health care situation. , 1983, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[56]  V. Entwistle,et al.  Decision aids for patients facing health treatment or screening decisions: systematic review , 1999, BMJ.

[57]  Larsen Km,et al.  Assessment of nonverbal communication in the patient-physician interview. , 1981 .

[58]  K. Cain,et al.  Physicians' and spouses' predictions of elderly patients' resuscitation preferences. , 1988, Journal of gerontology.

[59]  J. Johnson The effects of a patient education course on persons with a chronic illness , 1982, Cancer nursing.

[60]  R M Arnold,et al.  Absolutely relative: how research results are summarized can affect treatment decisions. , 1992, The American journal of medicine.

[61]  Jeffrey A. Sloan,et al.  The information needs of women newly diagnosed with breast cancer. , 1995, Journal of advanced nursing.

[62]  J. Ouslander,et al.  Health care decisions among elderly long-term care residents and their potential proxies. , 1989, Archives of internal medicine.

[63]  S. Kaplan,et al.  Assessing the Effects of Physician-Patient Interactions on the Outcomes of Chronic Disease , 1989, Medical care.

[64]  D B Carr,et al.  Postoperative patient-controlled analgesia: meta-analyses of initial randomized control trials. , 1993, Journal of clinical anesthesia.

[65]  A. Beisecker,et al.  Attitudes of medical students and primary care physicians regarding input of older and younger patients in medical decisions. , 1996, Medical care.

[66]  N. Boyd,et al.  Whose Utilities for Decision Analysis? , 1990, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[67]  Judith A. Hall,et al.  Meta-analysis of Correlates of Provider Behavior in Medical Encounters , 1988, Medical care.

[68]  Hughes Kk,et al.  Decision making by patients with breast cancer: the role of information in treatment selection. , 1993 .

[69]  C. Redmond,et al.  Reanalysis and results after 12 years of follow-up in a randomized clinical trial comparing total mastectomy with lumpectomy with or without irradiation in the treatment of breast cancer. , 1995, New England Journal of Medicine.

[70]  L. Siminoff,et al.  Doctor-patient communication about breast cancer adjuvant therapy. , 1989, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[71]  J. McGill,et al.  Change in Metabolic Control and Functional Status After Hospitalization: Impact of Patient Activation Intervention in Diabetic Patients , 1991, Diabetes Care.

[72]  M. Baun,et al.  Increasing patient control of family visiting in the coronary care unit. , 1995, American journal of critical care : an official publication, American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.

[73]  L. Fallowfield,et al.  Offering choice of treatment to patients with cancers. A review based on a symposium held at the 10th annual conference of The British Psychosocial Oncology Group, December 1993. , 1995, European journal of cancer.

[74]  W. Levinson,et al.  Informed decision making in outpatient practice: time to get back to basics. , 1999, JAMA.

[75]  E. Cook,et al.  Is Experience a Good Teacher? , 1997, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[76]  T. Randall Producers of videodisc programs strive to expand patient's role in medical decision-making process. , 1993, JAMA.

[77]  D H Hickam,et al.  Treatment Preferences of Patients and Physicians , 1990, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[78]  J. Young,et al.  What are the information priorities for cancer patients involved in treatment decisions? An experienced surrogate study in Hodgkin's disease. , 1996, British Journal of Cancer.

[79]  J. Morris,et al.  Choice of surgery for early breast cancer: psychosocial considerations. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[80]  A. Moyer,et al.  Psychosocial outcomes of breast-conserving surgery versus mastectomy: a meta-analytic review. , 1997, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[81]  D Feldman-Stewart,et al.  Using a Treatment-tradeoff Method to Elicit Preferences for the Treatment of Locally Advanced Non-Small-cell Lung Cancer , 1998, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[82]  L. Fallowfield,et al.  A question of choice: results of a prospective 3-year follow-up study of women with breast cancer , 1994 .

[83]  D. Streiner,et al.  Breast irradiation postlumpectomy: development and evaluation of a decision instrument. , 1995, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[84]  S. Wartman,et al.  When competent patients make irrational choices. , 1990, The New England journal of medicine.

[85]  L. Siminoff,et al.  Effects of outcome framing on treatment decisions in the real world: impact of framing on adjuvant breast cancer decisions. , 1989, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[86]  D. Eddy Judgment under uncertainty: Probabilistic reasoning in clinical medicine: Problems and opportunities , 1982 .

[87]  Shelley E. Taylor,et al.  Self-generated feelings of control and adjustment to physical illness. , 1991 .

[88]  D. Cella,et al.  Someone to live for: social well-being, parenthood status, and decision-making in oncology. , 1995, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[89]  S. Ford,et al.  The influence of audiotapes on patient participation in the cancer consultation. , 1995, European journal of cancer.

[90]  C Sebban,et al.  Design and validation of a bedside decision instrument to elicit a patient's preference concerning allogenic bone marrow transplantation in chronic myeloid leukemia , 1995, American journal of hematology.

[91]  D. Kanouse,et al.  Effects of the National Institutes of Health Consensus Development Program on physician practice. , 1987, JAMA.

[92]  Peter Tugwell,et al.  Randomized Trial of a Portable, Self-administered Decision Aid for Postmenopausal Women Considering Long-term Preventive Hormone Therapy , 1998, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[93]  S. Auerbach,et al.  Do Patients Want Control over their Own Health Care? A Review of Measures, Findings, and Research Issues , 2001, Journal of health psychology.

[94]  J. Merz,et al.  How Older Patients' Treatment Preferences Are Influenced by Disclosures About Therapeutic Uncertainty: Surgery Versus Expectant Management for Localized Prostate Cancer , 1996, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[95]  E J Robinson,et al.  Improving the efficiency of patients' comprehension monitoring: a way of increasing patients' participation in general practice consultations. , 1985, Social science & medicine.

[96]  D. Meier,et al.  Substituted judgment: how accurate are proxy predictions? , 1991, Annals of internal medicine.

[97]  G. Robinson,et al.  Informed consent: recall by patients tested postoperatively. , 1976, Connecticut medicine.

[98]  M. Barry,et al.  Patient Reactions to a Program Designed to Facilitate Patient Participation in Treatment Decisions for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia , 1995, Medical care.

[99]  B. McNeil,et al.  Speech and survival: tradeoffs between quality and quantity of life in laryngeal cancer. , 1981, The New England journal of medicine.

[100]  J. Tulsky,et al.  Patient knowledge and physician predictions of treatment preferences after discussion of advance directives , 1998, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[101]  K. Wallston,et al.  Desire for Control and Choice of Antiemetic Treatment for Cancer Chemotherapy , 1991, Western journal of nursing research.

[102]  J. Benbassat,et al.  Patients' preferences for participation in clinical decision making: a review of published surveys. , 1998, Behavioral medicine.

[103]  R. Street,et al.  Increasing patient involvement in choosing treatment for early breast cancer , 1995, Cancer.

[104]  R. Street,et al.  Provider-Patient Communication and Metabolic Control , 1993, Diabetes Care.

[105]  K. Wallston,et al.  Perceived control and health , 1987 .

[106]  D. Brody,et al.  The patient's role in clinical decision-making. , 1980, Annals of internal medicine.

[107]  M. V. von Friederichs-Fitzwater,et al.  Relational Control in Physician-Patient Encounters , 2001, Health communication.

[108]  R. Deber,et al.  What role do patients wish to play in treatment decision making? , 1996, Archives of internal medicine.

[109]  M. Litt Self-efficacy and perceived control: cognitive mediators of pain tolerance. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[110]  P. Salmon,et al.  Is patient-controlled analgesia controlled by the patient? , 1996, Social science & medicine.

[111]  B. Cassileth,et al.  Information and participation preferences among cancer patients. , 1980, Annals of internal medicine.

[112]  R. Cromwell Acute myocardial infarction: Reaction and recovery , 1977 .

[113]  C. Carver,et al.  Effects of mastectomy versus lumpectomy on emotional adjustment to breast cancer: a prospective study of the first year postsurgery. , 1992, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[114]  G. Duncan,et al.  Treatment strategies in advanced and metastatic cancer: differences in attitude between the USA, Canada and Europe. , 1992, International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics.

[115]  R. Froman,et al.  Preliminary validation of a measure of life support preferences. , 1995, Image--the journal of nursing scholarship.

[116]  H. Brody,et al.  Physician Recommendations and Patient Autonomy: Finding a Balance between Physician Power and Patient Choice , 1996, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[117]  J Fifield,et al.  Appraisals of control and predictability in adapting to a chronic disease. , 1987, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[118]  L. Fallowfield,et al.  The efficacy of audiotapes in promoting psychological well-being in cancer patients: a randomised, controlled trial. , 1995, British Journal of Cancer.

[119]  S. Thompson Will it hurt less if i can control it? A complex answer to a simple question. , 1981 .

[120]  J. O'Meara,et al.  A decision analysis of streptokinase plus heparin as compared with heparin alone for deep-vein thrombosis. , 1994, The New England journal of medicine.

[121]  Robert M Kaplan,et al.  Health-related quality of life in patient decision making. , 1991, The Journal of social issues.

[122]  H. Alpert,et al.  Comparing utilization of life-sustaining treatments with patient and public preferences , 1998, Journal of general internal medicine.

[123]  M Baum,et al.  Psychological outcomes of different treatment policies in women with early breast cancer outside a clinical trial. , 1990, BMJ.

[124]  J. Morris,et al.  Choice of surgery for early breast cancer: Pre‐ and postoperative levels of clinical anxiety and depression in patients and their husbands , 1987, The British journal of surgery.

[125]  N F Boyd,et al.  Eliciting preferences for alternative drug therapies in oncology: influence of treatment outcome description, elicitation technique and treatment experience on preferences. , 1987, Journal of chronic diseases.

[126]  M. Dimatteo,et al.  Enhancing Medication Adherence Through Communication and Informed Collaborative Choice , 1994 .

[127]  J. Kassirer,et al.  Decision analysis: a progress report. , 1987, Annals of internal medicine.

[128]  F. Carnerie Crisis and Informed Consent: Analysis of a Law-Medicine Malocclusion , 1986, American Journal of Law & Medicine.

[129]  I. Tannock,et al.  How expert physicians would wish to be treated if they had genitourinary cancer. , 1988, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[130]  D. Sackett,et al.  IMPROVEMENT OF MEDICATION COMPLIANCE IN UNCONTROLLED HYPERTENSION , 1976, The Lancet.

[131]  K C Carriere,et al.  Information needs and decisional preferences in women with breast cancer. , 1997, JAMA.

[132]  C. Rose,et al.  Information for cancer patients entering a clinical trial--an evaluation of an information strategy. , 1993, European journal of cancer.

[133]  J. Morris,et al.  Offering patients a choice of surgery for early breast cancer: a reduction in anxiety and depression in patients and their husbands. , 1988, Social science & medicine.

[134]  B. Rimer,et al.  Enhancing cancer pain control regimens through patient education. , 1987, Patient education and counseling.

[135]  Degner Lf,et al.  Information and decision-making preferences of men with prostate cancer. , 1995 .

[136]  P. Ley,et al.  Communicating with Patients: Improving Communication, Satisfaction and Compliance , 1988 .

[137]  L. Fallowfield,et al.  Doctor-patient interactions in oncology. , 1996, Social science & medicine.

[138]  The effect of varied physician affect on recall, anxiety, and perceptions in women at risk for breast cancer: an analogue study. , 1992 .

[139]  N Britten,et al.  Patient access to records: expectations of hospital doctors and experiences of cancer patients. , 1993, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[140]  S. Auerbach Stress management and coping research in the health care setting: an overview and methodological commentary. , 1989, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[141]  W. Mackillop,et al.  Cancer patients' perceptions of their disease and its treatment. , 1988, British Journal of Cancer.

[142]  B. Coyle,et al.  Patient literacy and the readability of written cancer educational materials. , 1995, Oncology nursing forum.

[143]  A. Mulley,et al.  Developing shared decision-making programs to improve the quality of health care. , 1992, QRB. Quality review bulletin.

[144]  E. Speedling,et al.  Building an effective doctor-patient relationship: from patient satisfaction to patient participation. , 1985, Social science & medicine.

[145]  A. Beisecker,et al.  Attitudes of oncologists, oncology nurses, and patients from a women's clinic regarding medical decision making for older and younger breast cancer patients. , 1994, The Gerontologist.

[146]  D. Robertson,et al.  What patients recall of the preoperative discussion after retinal detachment surgery. , 1979, American journal of ophthalmology.

[147]  P S Heckerling,et al.  Patient or Physician Preferences for Decision Analysis , 1999, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[148]  C Gatsonis,et al.  The Stability of Preferences for Life-sustaining Care among Persons with AIDS in the Boston Health Study , 1999, Medical decision making : an international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making.

[149]  V. Torri,et al.  The role of attitudes, beliefs, and personal characteristics of Italian physicians in the surgical treatment of early breast cancer. , 1991, American journal of public health.

[150]  E. Guadagnoli,et al.  Patient participation in decision-making. , 1998, Social science & medicine.

[151]  A. Gafni,et al.  A Bedside Decision Instrument To Elicit a Patient's Preference Concerning Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer , 1992, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[152]  J. Kirkwood,et al.  Mastectomy versus breast conservation surgery: mental health effects at long-term follow-up. , 1992, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[153]  P. Schellhammer,et al.  Patients' choice of treatment in stage D prostate cancer. , 1989, Urology.

[154]  L. Siminoff Cancer Patients and Physician Communication: Progress and Continuing Problems , 1989 .

[155]  J. Eisenberg,et al.  Changing physicians' practices. , 1993, Tobacco control.

[156]  F. Davidoff,et al.  Patient-Centered Medicine: A Professional Evolution , 1996 .

[157]  R. Pearlman,et al.  Stability of patient preferences regarding life-sustaining treatments. , 1990, Chest.

[158]  B. Andersen Psychological interventions for cancer patients to enhance the quality of life. , 1992, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[159]  J. Garrett,et al.  Who Decides?: Physicians' Willingness to Use Life-Sustaining Treatment , 1996 .

[160]  J. Garrett,et al.  Stability of Choices about Life-Sustaining Treatments , 1994, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[161]  D. Cella,et al.  Age and clinical decision making in oncology patients. , 1994, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[162]  K. Wallston,et al.  Choice and predictability in the preparation for barium enemas: a person-by-situation approach. , 1987, Research in nursing & health.

[163]  A. Faden,et al.  Disclosure of Information to Patients in Medical Care , 1981, Medical care.

[164]  I D Graham,et al.  Decision aids for patients considering options affecting cancer outcomes: evidence of efficacy and policy implications. , 1999, Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs.

[165]  F M Haaijer-Ruskamp,et al.  Towards understanding treatment preferences of hospital physicians. , 1993, Social science & medicine.

[166]  R. Preshaw,et al.  Comparison of one technique of patient-controlled postoperative analgesia with intramuscular meperidine , 1989, Pain.

[167]  C. Stocking,et al.  Sex or survival: trade-offs between quality and quantity of life. , 1991, Journal of clinical oncology : official journal of the American Society of Clinical Oncology.

[168]  E H Wagner,et al.  The Effect of a Shared Decisionmaking Program on Rates of Surgery for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia Pilot Results , 1995, Medical Care.

[169]  G. Morrow,et al.  A simple technique for increasing cancer patients' knowledge of informed consent to treatment , 1978, Cancer.