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Gender Differences in Health Information Needs and Decisional Preferences in Patients Recovering From an Acute Ischemic Coronary Event

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Gender Differences in Health Information Needs and Decisional Preferences in Patients Recovering From an Acute Ischemic Coronary Event

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Title: Gender Differences in Health Information Needs and Decisional Preferences in Patients Recovering From an Acute Ischemic Coronary Event
Author: Grace, Sherry L.; Irvine, Jane; Shnek, Zachary M.; Abbey, Susan E.; Stewart, Donna E.
Abstract: Objective: This study examined gender differences in health information needs and decisional preferences after an acute ischemic coronary event (ICE). Methods: Patients with ICE, recruited in 12 coronary intensive care units, completed a questionnaire on demographic, disease-related, and psychosocial topics. Six and 12 months later, they completed mailed follow-up questionnaires.
Results: Nine hundred six patients completed the baseline questionnaire, 541 (69%) completed the 6-month questionnaire, and 522
(64%) completed the 12-month questionnaire after hospital discharge. Men reported significantly more information received and
greater satisfaction with healthcare practitioners meeting their information needs. Women wanted more information than men
concerning angina and hypertension. Men wanted more information about sexual function and reported receiving more information about the role of each doctor, test results, treatments, cardiac rehabilitation, and how their families could support their lifestyle changes. Patients who reported receiving more information reported less depressive symptomatology and greater self-efficacy, healthcare satisfaction, and preventive health behaviors. Although most patients of both sexes preferred a shared decision-making
role with their physician, the majority felt their doctor had made the main decisions. Conclusions: Patients after ICE, especially
women, reported receiving much less information than they wanted from all health professionals. Most patients wanted a shared
or autonomous treatment decision-making role with their doctor, but only a minority experienced this. Clinicians must do better,
because meeting patients' information needs and respecting their decisional preferences are shown to be associated with better
self-efficacy, satisfaction, and health-promoting behavior.
Subject: decisional preferences
information
ischemic cardiac events
gender
Type: Article
Rights:
URI: http://hdl.handle.net.ezproxy.library.yorku.ca/10315/2568
Published: Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam
Citation: Complementary Therapies in Medicine, 16 (6), 311-317. December. 2008
ISSN: 0965-2299
Date: 2008-12

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