Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
Judith Hall, Michael Dornan (1988)
Meta-analysis of satisfaction with medical care: description of research domain and analysis of overall satisfaction levels.Social science & medicine, 27 6
J.Rees Lewis (1994)
Patient views on quality care in general practice: literature review.Social science & medicine, 39 5
A. Connors, N. Dawson, N. Desbiens, W. Fulkerson, L. Goldman, W. Knaus, J. Lynn, R. Oye, M. Bergner, A. Damiano, Raymond Hakim, D. Murphy, J. Teno, B. Virnig, D. Wagner, A. Wu, Yutaka Yasui, Detra Robinson, B. Kreling (1995)
A controlled trial to improve care for seriously ill hospitalized patients. The study to understand prognoses and preferences for outcomes and risks of treatments (SUPPORT). The SUPPORT Principal Investigators.JAMA, 274 20
R. Deber (1994)
Physicians in health care management: 7. The patient-physician partnership: changing roles and the desire for information.CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne, 151 2
R. Soetikno, L. Lenert (1995)
Preference Assessment for Outcomes of Deep Vein Thrombosis Using a Multimedia Approach.
P. Brennan, E. Tornquist, S. Schneider (1997)
Information Networks for Community Health
J. Larrabee, V. Engle, E. Tolley (1995)
Predictors of patient-perceived quality.Scandinavian journal of caring sciences, 9 3
R. Uhlmann, R. Pearlman, K. Cain (1988)
Physicians' and spouses' predictions of elderly patients' resuscitation preferences.Journal of gerontology, 43 5
R. Nease, Terry Kneeland, G. O'connor, W. Sumner, C. Lumpkins, L. Shaw, D. Pryor, H. Sox (1995)
Variation in Patient Utilities for Outcomes of the Management of Chronic Stable Angina: Implications for Clinical Practice GuidelinesJAMA, 273
M. Kohn, Geeta Menon (1988)
Life Prolongation: Views of Elderly Outpatients and Health Care ProfessionalsJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 36
J. Lebow (1983)
Client Satisfaction With Mental Health TreatmentEvaluation Review, 7
F. Fowler, P. Cleary, J. Magaziner, D. Patrick, K. Benjamin (1994)
Methodological Issues in Measuring Patient‐Reported Outcomes: The Agenda of the Work Group on Outcomes AssessmentMedical Care, 32
R. Gala, D. Haisenleder (1986)
Restraint stress decreases afternoon plasma prolactin levels in female rats. Influence of neural antagonists and agonists on restraint-induced changes in plasma prolactin and corticosterone.Neuroendocrinology, 43 2
(1991)
Benign and malignant breast disease : the relationship between women ’ s health status and health values
R. Nease, Terry Kneeland, G. O'connor, W. Sumner, C. Lumpkins, Linda Shaw, D. Pryor, H. Sox (1995)
Variation in patient utilities for outcomes of the management of chronic stable angina. Implications for clinical practice guidelines. Ischemic Heart Disease Patient Outcomes Research Team.JAMA, 273 15
D. Orem (1972)
Nursing: Concepts of practice
H. Llewellyn-Thomas, H. Sutherland, E. Thiel (1993)
Do Patients' Evaluations of a Future Health State Change When They Actually Enter That State?Medical Care, 31
Jay Lebow (1983)
Research assessing consumer satisfaction with mental health treatment: a review of findings.Evaluation and program planning, 6 3-4
J. Kasper, A. Mulley, Jack Wennberg (1992)
Developing shared decision-making programs to improve the quality of health care.QRB. Quality review bulletin, 18 6
J. Wennberg, M. Barry, F. Fowler, A. Mulley (1993)
Outcomes Research, PORTs, and Health Care ReformAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 703
M. Charlson, P. Pompei, Kathy Ales, C. MacKenzie (1987)
A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: development and validation.Journal of chronic diseases, 40 5
D. Gustafson, K. Bosworth (1989)
CHESS: the comprehensive health enhancement support system
J. Kassirer (1994)
Incorporating patients' preferences into medical decisions.The New England journal of medicine, 330 26
J. Begun, M. Wadsworth, D. Robinson (1982)
Studies in Everyday Medical Life.Social Forces, 61
S. Abramowitz, A. Coté, Elisabeth Berry (1987)
Analyzing patient satisfaction: a multianalytic approach.QRB. Quality review bulletin, 13 4
Margaret Genteis, S. Edgman-Levitan, Jennifer Dalay, T. Delbanco (1997)
Through the Patientʼs Eyes: Understanding and Promoting Patient-Centered CareJournal for Healthcare Quality, 19
M. Barry, D. Cherkin, C. Yuchiao, F. Fowler, S. Skates (1997)
A Randomized Trial of a Multimedia Shared Decision-Making Program for Men Facing a Treatment Decision for Benign Prostatic HyperplasiaDisease Management and Clinical Outcomes, 1
M. Bergner, R. Bobbitt, W. Carter, B. Gilson (1981)
The Sickness Impact Profile: Development and Final Revision of a Health Status MeasureMedical Care, 19
E. Monica, M. Oberst, A. Madea, R. Wolf (1986)
Development of a patient satisfaction scale.Research in nursing & health, 9 1
N. Boyd, H. Sutherland, K. Heasman, D. Tritchler, B. Cummings (1990)
Whose Utilities for Decision Analysis?Medical Decision Making, 10
Norman Meyers, J. Serrin (1964)
H = W.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 51 6
J. O'Meara, R. Mcnutt, A. Evans, Stacy Moore, S. Downs (1994)
A decision analysis of streptokinase plus heparin as compared with heparin alone for deep-vein thrombosis.The New England journal of medicine, 330 26
R. Uhlmann, R. Pearlman, K. Cain (1989)
Understanding of elderly patients' resuscitation preferences by physicians and nurses.The Western journal of medicine, 150 6
L. Lenert, R. Soetikno (1997)
Research Paper: Automated Computer Interviews to Elicit Utilities: Potential Applications in the Treatment of Deep Venous ThrombosisJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA, 4 1
AbstractObjective: While preference elicitation techniques have been effective in helping patients make decisions consistent with their preferences, little is known about whether information about patient preferences affects clinicians in clinical decision making and improves patient outcomes. The purpose of this study was to evaluate a decision support system for eliciting elderly patients' preferences for self-care capability and providing this information to nurses in clinical practice—specifically, its effect on nurses' care priorities and the patient outcomes of preference achievement and patient satisfaction.Design: Three-group quasi-experimental design with one experimental and two control groups (N = 151). In the experimental group computer-processed information about individual patient's preferences was placed in patients' charts to be used for care planning.Results: Information about patient preferences changed nurses' care priorities to be more consistent with patient preferences and improved patients' preference achievement and physical functioning. Further, higher consistency between patient preferences and nurses' care priorities was associated with higher preference achievement, and higher preference achievement with greater patient satisfaction.Conclusion: This study demonstrated that decision support for eliciting patient preferences and including them in nursing care planning is an effective and feasible strategy for improving nursing care and patient outcomes.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association – Oxford University Press
Published: Jul 1, 1999
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.