Factors affecting medical decision-making in patients with osteoarthritis of the hip: allocation of surgical priority

被引:11
作者
Dolin, SJ [1 ]
Williams, ACD
Ashford, N
George, J
Pereira, L
Perello, A
机构
[1] St Richards Hosp, Pain Clin, Chichester PO19 4SE, England
[2] St Thomas Hosp, INPUT Pain Management Unit, London, England
[3] St Richards Hosp, Dept Med Imaging, Chichester, England
[4] King Edward VIII Hosp, Anaesthet Dept, Midhurst, England
关键词
D O I
10.1080/0963828031000090551
中图分类号
R49 [康复医学];
学科分类号
100215 [康复医学与理疗学];
摘要
Purpose: The purpose was to determine (1) how well doctors' assessments of patients matched the patients own self assessments and (2) what doctors looked for in terms of patient factors (such as pain and dysfunction, radiographic evidence) that influenced their decisions to allocate priority for hip replacement. Method. Data collected independently from patients and surgeons after consultation were used to investigate medical decision-making. Patients were 74 consecutive patients who were offered total hip replacement in an orthopaedic outpatient department at a single hospital. Main measures were (1) assignment to priority group; (2) surgeons' ratings of patient pain, function, stoicism and predicted benefit; (3) patients' pain ratings, function (Arthritis Impact Measurement Scale) and timed walk, and predicted benefit; (4) hip radiographs were assessed independently using composite grading scores. Results: Surgeon- and patient-rated current pain and function were reasonably correlated; predicted benefit from surgery in pain and function were not, although surgeons predicted greater benefit. High priority for surgery was associated with higher surgeon-rated patient pain and function, by higher pain ratings by patients, more severe radiographic abnormalities, by being female and over 70. Some patients with relatively low pain scores and low levels of dysfunction were offered hip replacements. Conclusions: Doctors made reasonable estimates of patients' pain and function by direct history taking and examination. There was no systematic underestimation of patients' pain, in contrast to previous studies. Doctors' estimate plus radiological changes account for most of the priority differences. Patients' and surgeons' expectation of improvement, relatively unrelated to severity of pain and dysfunction, in the absence of agreed minimal clinical criteria, may drive surgical demand. There was a wide range in measures of pain and function. Introduction of formal measurement of pain and function, and setting formal clinical criteria, could assist medical decision-making.
引用
收藏
页码:771 / 777
页数:7
相关论文
共 29 条
[1]
ALTMAN RD, 1991, J RHEUMATOL, V18, P10
[2]
Physician and patient factors influencing the treatment of low back pain [J].
Bartfield, JM ;
Salluzzo, RF ;
RaccioRobak, N ;
Funk, DL ;
Verdile, VP .
PAIN, 1997, 73 (02) :209-211
[3]
CLARKE JR, 1991, ANN CHIR, V45, P279
[4]
DANDY DJ, 1998, ESSENTIAL ORTHOPAEDI, P383
[5]
DANIELSSON L, 1997, CLIN ORTHOP RELAT R, V10, P107
[6]
Admission decisions in emergency department chest pain patients at low risk for myocardial infarction: Patient versus physician preferences [J].
Davis, MA ;
Keerbs, A ;
Hoffman, JR ;
Baraff, LJ .
ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1996, 28 (06) :606-611
[7]
Questionnaire on the perceptions of patients about total hip replacement [J].
Dawson, J ;
Fitzpatrick, R ;
Carr, A ;
Murray, D .
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-BRITISH VOLUME, 1996, 78B (02) :185-190
[8]
Dougados M, 1999, J RHEUMATOL, V26, P855
[9]
Radiological progression of hip osteoarthritis: Definition, risk factors and correlations with clinical status [J].
Dougados, M ;
Gueguen, A ;
Nguyen, M ;
Berdah, L ;
Lequesne, M ;
Mazieres, B ;
Vignon, E .
ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES, 1996, 55 (06) :356-362
[10]
FIELD LT, 1997, 2 C EUR FED IASP CHA, P381