Design and development of a digital shared decision-making tool for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation

Author:

Nunes Julio C12ORCID,Baykaner Tina3,Pundi Krishna3,DeSutter Katie1,True Hills Mellanie4,Mahaffey Kenneth W13,Sears Samuel F5,Morin Daniel P6,Lin Bryant3,Wang Paul J3,Stafford Randall S7

Affiliation:

1. Stanford Center for Clinical Research, Stanford University , Palo Alto, California, USA

2. Department of Psychiatry, Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut, USA

3. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Stanford University , Palo Alto, California, USA

4. StopAfib.org, American Foundation for Women’s Health , Decatur, Texas, USA

5. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, East Carolina University , Greenville, North Carolina, USA

6. Cardiovascular Research, Ochsner Medical Center , New Orleans, Louisiana, USA

7. Stanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford University , Palo Alto, California, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Shared decision-making (SDM) is an approach in which patients and clinicians act as partners in making medical decisions. Patients receive the information needed to decide and are encouraged to balance risks, benefits, and preferences. Informative materials are vital to SDM. Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia and responsible for 10% of ischemic strokes, however 1/3 of patients are not on appropriate anticoagulation. Decision sharing may facilitate treatment acceptance, improving outcomes. Aims To develop a framework of the components needed to create novel SDM tools and to provide practical examples through a case-study of stroke prevention in AF. Methods We analyze the design values of a web-based SDM tool created to better inform AF patients about anticoagulation. The tool was developed in partnership with patient advocates, multi-disciplinary investigators, and private design firms. It was refined through iterative, recursive testing in patients with AF. Its effectiveness is being evaluated in a multisite clinical trial led by Stanford University and sponsored by the American Heart Association. Findings The main components considered when creating the Stanford AFib tool included: design and software; content identification; information delivery; inclusive communication, user engagement; patient feedback; clinician experience; and anticipation of implementation and dissemination. We also highlight the ethical principles underlying SDM; matters of diversity and inclusion, linguistic variety, accessibility, and health literacy. The Stanford AFib Guide patient tool is available at: https://afibguide.com and the clinician tool at https://afibguide.com/clinician. Conclusion Attention to a range of vital development and design factors can facilitate tool adoption and information acquisition by diverse cultural, educational, and socioeconomic subpopulations. With thoughtful design, digital tools may decrease decision regret and improve treatment outcomes across many decision-making situations in healthcare.

Funder

American Heart Association

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Health Informatics

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