4.2 Article

Do Patients Want to Be Involved in Their Carpal Tunnel Decisions? A Multicenter

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAND SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME
Volume 48, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhsa.2022.03.025

Keywords

Carpal tunnel release; patient involvement; shared decision-making

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Patients with carpal tunnel syndrome have varying degrees of preference for involvement in the decision-making process, with a preference for a semi-passive role in intraoperative and postoperative decisions.
Purpose Carpal tunnel syndrome requires multiple decisions during its management, including regarding preoperative studies, surgical technique, and postoperative wound management. Whether patients have varying preferences for the degree to which they share in decisions during different phases of care has not been explored. The goal of our study was to evaluate the degree to which patients want to be involved along the care pathway in the management of carpal tunnel syndrome. Methods We performed a prospective, multicenter study of patients undergoing carpal tunnel surgery at 5 academic medical centers. Patients received a 27-item questionnaire to rate their preferred level of involvement for decisions made during 3 phases of care for carpal tunnel surgery: preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative. Preferences for participation were quantified using the Control Preferences Scale. These questions were scored on a scale of 0 to 4, with patient-only decisions scoring 0, semiactive decisions scoring 1, equally collaborative decisions scoring 2, semipassive decisions scoring 3, and physician-only decisions scoring 4. Descriptive statistics were calculated. Results Seventy-one patients completed the survey between November 2018 and April 2019. Overall, patients preferred semipassive decisions in all phases of care (median score, 3). Patients preferred equally collaborative decisions for preoperative decisions (median score, 2). Patients preferred a semipassive decision-making role for intraoperative and postoperative decisions (median score, 3), suggesting these did not need to be equally shared. Conclusions Patients with carpal tunnel syndrome prefer varying degrees of involvement in the decision-making process of their care and prefer a semipassive role in intraoperative and postoperative decisions. Clinical relevance Strategies to engage patients to varying degrees for all decisions during the management of carpal tunnel syndrome, such as decision aids for preoperative surgical de-cisions and educational handouts for intraoperative decisions, may facilitate aligning decisions with patient preferences for shared decision-making. (J Hand Surg Am. 2023;48(11):1162.e1 -e8. Copyright (c) 2023 by the American Society for Surgery of the Hand. All rights reserved.)

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