Metabolic and Cardiovascular Effects of Androgen Deprivation Therapy - Abstract

Department of Family and Community Medicine, and Houston Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics, Baylor College of Medicine, United States.

To evaluate an entertainment-based patient decision aid for prostate cancer screening among patients with low or high health literacy.

Male primary care patients from two clinical sites, one characterized as serving patients with low health literacy (n=149) and the second as serving patients with high health literacy (n=301), were randomized to receive an entertainment-based decision aid for prostate cancer screening or an audiobooklet-control aid with the same learner content but without the entertainment features. Postintervention and 2-week follow-up assessments were conducted.

Patients at the low-literacy site were more engaged with the entertainment-based aid than patients at the high-literacy site. Overall, knowledge improved for all patients. Among patients at the low-literacy site, the entertainment-based aid was associated with lower decisional conflict and greater self-advocacy (i.e., mastering and obtaining information about screening) when compared to patients given the audiobooklet. No differences between the aids were observed for patients at the high-literacy site.

Entertainment education may be an effective strategy for promoting informed decision making about prostate cancer screening among patients with lower health literacy.

As barriers to implementing computer-based patient decision support programs decrease, alternative models for delivering these programs should be explored.

Written by:
Volk RJ, Jibaja-Weiss ML, Hawley ST, Kneuper S, Spann SJ, Miles BJ, Hyman DJ.   Are you the author?

Reference:
Patient Educ Couns. 2008 Aug 28. Epub ahead of print.
doi:10.1016/j.pec.2008.07.033

PubMed Abstract
PMID:18760888

 

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