Publication | Open Access
Decision Aids for Prostate Cancer Screening Choice
60
Citations
48
References
2019
Year
The results of this study provide moderate-quality evidence that decision aids compared with usual care are associated with a small decrease in decisional conflict and low-quality evidence that they are associated with an increase in knowledge but not with whether physicians and patients discussed prostate cancer screening or with screening choice. Results suggest that further progress in facilitating effective shared decision-making may require decision aids that not only provide education to patients but are specifically targeted to promote shared decision-making in the patient-physician encounter.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1