The effects of coaching patients to list questions before visiting cancer specialists: retrospective evaluation of visit preparation in a rural, underserved setting

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Abstract

Background: A community-based organization implemented an evidence-based intervention to help rural cancer patients list questions before oncology visits. Objective: Was the question-listing intervention effective in reducing anxiety and increasing decision self-efficacy? Methods: The organization surveyed patients on decision self-efficacy (273 respondents, 99% response rate) and anxiety (190, 68%) before and after question-listing interventions delivered from 2006 – 2011. We analyzed responses using two-sided paired t-tests at 5% significance and conducted linear regression to identify significant predictors of change. We examined predictors related to the patient (location, demographics, disease status and baseline decision self-efficacy and anxiety); the intervention (including interventionist case volume); and the visit (including type of doctor seen). Results: Question-listing was associated with higher mean decision self-efficacy (2.70/3.43 pre/post, 1-4 min-max, P

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Belkora, J. K., Naguit, M., Stupar, L., Wiley, J., Volz, S., & O’Donnell, S. (2017). The effects of coaching patients to list questions before visiting cancer specialists: retrospective evaluation of visit preparation in a rural, underserved setting. Journal of Participatory Medicine, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.2196/jopm.8949

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