Study shows online tools help women prepare for breast cancer surgery decisions
UW Health News May 03, 2017
A University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center researcher found that women who had access to online educational materials came to their first meetings with their breast–cancer surgeons better prepared to make decisions.
Dr. Heather Neuman, associate professor of surgical oncology, wanted to know if receiving online information prior to the surgeon visit helped women understand their options and clarify their priorities. Her study looked at 309 women with early–stage breast cancer. Before their initial meetings with a surgeon, they were sent an email that linked to either a high–quality cancer web site, such as the American Cancer SocietyÂs cancer.org, or to an online decision aid that included videos, text explanations and comparison tables.
The women were then tested before their surgery consultations, and those who were sent to the standard web sites got 66 percent of the questions correct, compared with women who used the decision–making tool, who answered 80 percent correctly. Importantly, more women who used the tool knew that it was fine to wait a few weeks before making surgery decisions.
ÂWomen who viewed the decision aid seemed to have a decreased urgency to quickly make a treatment decision, says Neuman, who is a breast–cancer surgeon. ÂThis may ultimately increase the quality of their consultations with their surgeons and enhance their ability to make a good decision.Â
Neuman presented her findings at the 2017 Society of Surgical Oncology meeting.
Go to Original
Dr. Heather Neuman, associate professor of surgical oncology, wanted to know if receiving online information prior to the surgeon visit helped women understand their options and clarify their priorities. Her study looked at 309 women with early–stage breast cancer. Before their initial meetings with a surgeon, they were sent an email that linked to either a high–quality cancer web site, such as the American Cancer SocietyÂs cancer.org, or to an online decision aid that included videos, text explanations and comparison tables.
The women were then tested before their surgery consultations, and those who were sent to the standard web sites got 66 percent of the questions correct, compared with women who used the decision–making tool, who answered 80 percent correctly. Importantly, more women who used the tool knew that it was fine to wait a few weeks before making surgery decisions.
ÂWomen who viewed the decision aid seemed to have a decreased urgency to quickly make a treatment decision, says Neuman, who is a breast–cancer surgeon. ÂThis may ultimately increase the quality of their consultations with their surgeons and enhance their ability to make a good decision.Â
Neuman presented her findings at the 2017 Society of Surgical Oncology meeting.
Only Doctors with an M3 India account can read this article. Sign up for free or login with your existing account.
4 reasons why Doctors love M3 India
-
Exclusive Write-ups & Webinars by KOLs
-
Daily Quiz by specialty
-
Paid Market Research Surveys
-
Case discussions, News & Journals' summaries