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Patient choice is only one part of good health care; a separate problem is how often doctors fail to offer proven care, such as medications that improve survival after a heart attack.
But many other scenarios -- back surgery, knee and hip replacement, enlarged prostates, especially end-of-life care -- have no one-size-fits-all guidelines, and Dartmouth research suggests where patients live often is the biggest determinant of what they get. For example, elderly patients with chronic illnesses spend 11 days in the hospital in Bend, Ore., over their last two years of life -- while those in Manhattan spend 35 days in the hospital, although the extra care doesn't lengthen life.
A new University of Michigan study of how 3,000 patients made common medical choices suggests patients frequently have misinformation. Fewer than one in five could name the most common side effect of cholesterol-lowering statin drugs they were considering, for example. Moreover, patients said their doctors discussed treatment advantages more than the disadvantages.
Whether decision aids or some other approach truly improves informed choice remains to be seen, but a handful of medical centers are trying the guides.
"You're getting so much information thrown at you at one time, it's hard to assimilate," says Alethea Cassidy, 53, of Erie, Pa., who was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer in March 2007 and received a similar decision-aid video from Allegheny General Hospital. It helped her decide to keep her breast. "It alleviates any doubts."
[Associated
Press;
Lauran Neergaard covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press in Washington.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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