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The vast majority of women with menopausal symptoms who completed an online shared decision-making counseling session felt better prepared to discuss treatment options with their provider, a post-intervention survey showed.

Sharon Worcester/MDedge News
Dr. Sandra Dayaratna

Of 36 women who completed the counseling, 72% were able to express a clear preference for a particular treatment. Additionally, 90% to 100% of those who completed the final survey said the various components of the counseling–such as an educational brochure or a telephone call from a research nurse–made them feel more prepared to speak with their provider about treatment options, Sandra Dayaratna, MD, reported during a poster session at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Among 18 women with vasomotor symptoms, 6 (33%) preferred non-hormone treatment, 7 (39%) preferred hormone treatment, and 5 (28%) were unsure; among 18 with genitourinary symptoms of menopause, 6 (33%) preferred non-prescription treatment, 7 (39%) preferred topical hormone therapy, and 5 (28%) were unsure, Dr. Dayaratna, division director and clinical associate professor at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia, found.

Of women who were not being treated for vasomotor symptoms, 5 (56%) expressed a clear treatment preference after counseling, whereas 8 (80%) of those not receiving treatment for genitourinary symptoms expressed a clear preference. Among 7 women receiving systemic hormone therapy for vasomotor symptoms, 86% preferred this treatment after counseling, and 3 women (50%) receiving topical hormone therapy preferred topical treatment after counseling.

The study included women aged 36-50 years from diverse educational and racial backgrounds who were referred to the counseling program after reporting menopausal symptoms, completing a baseline survey, and providing consent. The counseling, which was adapted from a tool developed at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital for the assessment of patients with colon and cancer or lung cancer, involved an educational brochure that was mailed to participants. It also offered access to an online tool that provided information about systemic hormone therapy, non-hormone prescription therapy, topical hormone treatment, and non-prescription treatment for vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms of menopause.

A research nurse contacted participants by phone and used the online program to review the brochure, clarify treatment preference, and produce a summary of the results.

In an interview, Dr. Dayaratna noted that the concept of “shared decision making” is often misunderstood to mean that patients are provided with information about options and then they make a choice.

Actually, this study demonstrates that shared decision making really involves a “values clarification” component, she explained. In this study, counseling that incorporates this type of shared decision making helped women feel more prepared to speak with their providers about treatment and thus may add value to care of menopausal women, she concluded.

“This is relevant because we know that over 50% of patients within 90 minutes of leaving their doctor’s office have forgotten what they were told, and over 50% do not comply with their treatment prescriptions,” she said. “So if patients can do this process ahead of time, when they come to speak to their physician about their symptoms and selection of medication, it’s a more effective and efficient conversation.”

Further research should evaluate impact on the subsequent office visit, she added.

This study was funded by an educational grant from Pfizer, Inc. and by the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Dayaratna reported having no disclosures.

SOURCE: Dayaratna S et al., ACOG 2019: Abstract 21M.

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The vast majority of women with menopausal symptoms who completed an online shared decision-making counseling session felt better prepared to discuss treatment options with their provider, a post-intervention survey showed.

Sharon Worcester/MDedge News
Dr. Sandra Dayaratna

Of 36 women who completed the counseling, 72% were able to express a clear preference for a particular treatment. Additionally, 90% to 100% of those who completed the final survey said the various components of the counseling–such as an educational brochure or a telephone call from a research nurse–made them feel more prepared to speak with their provider about treatment options, Sandra Dayaratna, MD, reported during a poster session at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Among 18 women with vasomotor symptoms, 6 (33%) preferred non-hormone treatment, 7 (39%) preferred hormone treatment, and 5 (28%) were unsure; among 18 with genitourinary symptoms of menopause, 6 (33%) preferred non-prescription treatment, 7 (39%) preferred topical hormone therapy, and 5 (28%) were unsure, Dr. Dayaratna, division director and clinical associate professor at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia, found.

Of women who were not being treated for vasomotor symptoms, 5 (56%) expressed a clear treatment preference after counseling, whereas 8 (80%) of those not receiving treatment for genitourinary symptoms expressed a clear preference. Among 7 women receiving systemic hormone therapy for vasomotor symptoms, 86% preferred this treatment after counseling, and 3 women (50%) receiving topical hormone therapy preferred topical treatment after counseling.

The study included women aged 36-50 years from diverse educational and racial backgrounds who were referred to the counseling program after reporting menopausal symptoms, completing a baseline survey, and providing consent. The counseling, which was adapted from a tool developed at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital for the assessment of patients with colon and cancer or lung cancer, involved an educational brochure that was mailed to participants. It also offered access to an online tool that provided information about systemic hormone therapy, non-hormone prescription therapy, topical hormone treatment, and non-prescription treatment for vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms of menopause.

A research nurse contacted participants by phone and used the online program to review the brochure, clarify treatment preference, and produce a summary of the results.

In an interview, Dr. Dayaratna noted that the concept of “shared decision making” is often misunderstood to mean that patients are provided with information about options and then they make a choice.

Actually, this study demonstrates that shared decision making really involves a “values clarification” component, she explained. In this study, counseling that incorporates this type of shared decision making helped women feel more prepared to speak with their providers about treatment and thus may add value to care of menopausal women, she concluded.

“This is relevant because we know that over 50% of patients within 90 minutes of leaving their doctor’s office have forgotten what they were told, and over 50% do not comply with their treatment prescriptions,” she said. “So if patients can do this process ahead of time, when they come to speak to their physician about their symptoms and selection of medication, it’s a more effective and efficient conversation.”

Further research should evaluate impact on the subsequent office visit, she added.

This study was funded by an educational grant from Pfizer, Inc. and by the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Dayaratna reported having no disclosures.

SOURCE: Dayaratna S et al., ACOG 2019: Abstract 21M.

The vast majority of women with menopausal symptoms who completed an online shared decision-making counseling session felt better prepared to discuss treatment options with their provider, a post-intervention survey showed.

Sharon Worcester/MDedge News
Dr. Sandra Dayaratna

Of 36 women who completed the counseling, 72% were able to express a clear preference for a particular treatment. Additionally, 90% to 100% of those who completed the final survey said the various components of the counseling–such as an educational brochure or a telephone call from a research nurse–made them feel more prepared to speak with their provider about treatment options, Sandra Dayaratna, MD, reported during a poster session at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Among 18 women with vasomotor symptoms, 6 (33%) preferred non-hormone treatment, 7 (39%) preferred hormone treatment, and 5 (28%) were unsure; among 18 with genitourinary symptoms of menopause, 6 (33%) preferred non-prescription treatment, 7 (39%) preferred topical hormone therapy, and 5 (28%) were unsure, Dr. Dayaratna, division director and clinical associate professor at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital and Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Philadelphia, found.

Of women who were not being treated for vasomotor symptoms, 5 (56%) expressed a clear treatment preference after counseling, whereas 8 (80%) of those not receiving treatment for genitourinary symptoms expressed a clear preference. Among 7 women receiving systemic hormone therapy for vasomotor symptoms, 86% preferred this treatment after counseling, and 3 women (50%) receiving topical hormone therapy preferred topical treatment after counseling.

The study included women aged 36-50 years from diverse educational and racial backgrounds who were referred to the counseling program after reporting menopausal symptoms, completing a baseline survey, and providing consent. The counseling, which was adapted from a tool developed at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital for the assessment of patients with colon and cancer or lung cancer, involved an educational brochure that was mailed to participants. It also offered access to an online tool that provided information about systemic hormone therapy, non-hormone prescription therapy, topical hormone treatment, and non-prescription treatment for vasomotor and genitourinary symptoms of menopause.

A research nurse contacted participants by phone and used the online program to review the brochure, clarify treatment preference, and produce a summary of the results.

In an interview, Dr. Dayaratna noted that the concept of “shared decision making” is often misunderstood to mean that patients are provided with information about options and then they make a choice.

Actually, this study demonstrates that shared decision making really involves a “values clarification” component, she explained. In this study, counseling that incorporates this type of shared decision making helped women feel more prepared to speak with their providers about treatment and thus may add value to care of menopausal women, she concluded.

“This is relevant because we know that over 50% of patients within 90 minutes of leaving their doctor’s office have forgotten what they were told, and over 50% do not comply with their treatment prescriptions,” she said. “So if patients can do this process ahead of time, when they come to speak to their physician about their symptoms and selection of medication, it’s a more effective and efficient conversation.”

Further research should evaluate impact on the subsequent office visit, she added.

This study was funded by an educational grant from Pfizer, Inc. and by the National Cancer Institute. Dr. Dayaratna reported having no disclosures.

SOURCE: Dayaratna S et al., ACOG 2019: Abstract 21M.

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