Physicians' Participatory Decision-making and Quality of Diabetes Care Processes and Outcomes: Results from the Triad Study
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Objectives: In participatory decision-making (PDM), physicians actively engage patients in treatment and other care decisions. Patients who report that their physicians engage in PDM have better disease self-management and health outcomes. We examined whether physicians' diabetes-specific treatment PDM preferences as well as their self-reported practices are associated with the quality of diabetes care their patients receive.
Methods: 2003 cross-sectional survey and medical record review of a random sample of diabetes patients (n=4198) in 10 US health plans across the country and their physicians (n=1217). We characterized physicians' diabetes care PDM preferences and practices as 'no patient involvement,' 'physician-dominant,' 'shared,' or 'patient-dominant' and conducted multivariate analyses examining their effects on the following: (1) three diabetes care processes (annual hemoglobin A1c test; lipid test; and dilated retinal exam); (2) patients'satisfaction with physician communication; and (3) whether patients' A1c, systolic blood pressure (SBP), and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL) were in control.
Results: Most physicians preferred 'shared' PDM (58%) rather than 'no patient involvement' (9%), 'physician-dominant' (28%) or 'patient dominant' PDM (5%). However, most reported practicing 'physician-dominant' PDM (43%) with most of their patients, rather than 'no patient involvement' (13%), 'shared' (37%) or 'patient-dominant' PDM (7%). After adjusting for patient and physician-level characteristics and clustering by health plan, patients of physicians who preferred 'shared' PDM were more likely to receive A1c tests [90% vs. 82%, AOR: 2.05, 95% CI: 1.03-3.07] and patients of physicians who preferred 'patient-dominant' treatment decision-making were more likely to receive lipid tests [60% vs. 50%, AOR: 1.58, 95% CI: 1.04-2.39] than those of providers who preferred 'no patient involvement' in treatment decision-making. There were no differences in patients' satisfaction with their doctor's communication or control of A1c, SBP or LDL depending on their physicians' PDM preferences. Physicians' self-reported PDM practices were not associated with any of the examined aspects of diabetes care in multivariate analyses.
Conclusions: Patients whose physicians prefer more patient involvement in decision-making are more likely than patients whose physicians prefer more physician-directed styles to receive some recommended risk factor screening tests, an important first step toward improved diabetes outcomes. Involving patients in treatment decision-making alone, however, appears not to be sufficient to improve biomedical outcomes.
Peimani M, Stewart A, Garmaroudi G, Nasli-Esfahani E BMC Health Serv Res. 2025; 25(1):39.
PMID: 39773273 PMC: 11705876. DOI: 10.1186/s12913-024-12160-z.
Cervantes-Ortega M, Du S, Biegler K, Al-Majid S, Davis K, Chen Y Int J Healthc. 2021; 6(2):35-43.
PMID: 33898743 PMC: 8064556. DOI: 10.5430/ijh.v6n2p35.
mHealth for diabetes self-management in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia: barriers and solutions.
Alanzi T J Multidiscip Healthc. 2018; 11:535-546.
PMID: 30349285 PMC: 6183657. DOI: 10.2147/JMDH.S174198.
A narrative systematic review of factors affecting diabetes prevention in primary care settings.
Messina J, Campbell S, Morris R, Eyles E, Sanders C PLoS One. 2017; 12(5):e0177699.
PMID: 28531197 PMC: 5439678. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177699.
Lyles C, Altschuler A, Chawla N, Kowalski C, McQuillan D, Bayliss E JMIR Mhealth Uhealth. 2016; 4(3):e108.
PMID: 27627965 PMC: 5040865. DOI: 10.2196/mhealth.6187.