Abstract
Purpose: Osteoporosis Choice, an encounter decision aid, can engage patients and clinicians in shared decision making about osteoporosis treatment. Its effectiveness compared to the routine provision to clinicians of the patient's estimated risk of fracture using the FRAX calculator is unknown. Methods: Patient-level, randomized, three-arm trial enrolling women over 50 with osteopenia or osteoporosis eligible for treatment with bisphosphonates, where the use of Osteoporosis Choice was compared to FRAX only and to usual care to determine impact on patient knowledge, decisional conflict, involvement in the decision-making process, decision to start and adherence to bisphosphonates. Results: We enrolled 79 women in the three arms. Because FRAX estimation alone and usual care produced similar results, we grouped them for analysis. Compared to these, use of Osteoporosis Choice increased patient knowledge (median score 6 vs. 4, p = .01), improved understanding of fracture risk and risk reduction with bisphosphonates (p = .01 and p
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CITATION STYLE
LeBlanc, A., Wang, A. T., Wyatt, K., Branda, M. E., Shah, N. D., Van Houten, H., … Montori, V. M. (2015). Encounter decision aid vs. clinical decision support or usual care to support patient-centered treatment decisions in osteoporosis: The Osteoporosis Choice randomized trial II. PLoS ONE, 10(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128063
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