Document detail
ID

oai:pubmedcentral.nih.gov:9344...

Topic
Research
Author
Ito, Yuma Ishikawa, Hirono Suzuki, Asuka Kato, Mio
Langue
en
Editor

BioMed Central

Category

BMC Veterinary Research

Year

2022

listing date

12/12/2023

Keywords
study medicine 0 results conducted relationship decision-making sdm-q-9 veterinary veterinarians owners sdm-q-doc sdm
Metrics

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Communication skills are a necessary competency in veterinary medicine, and shared decision-making (SDM) between practitioners and patients is becoming increasingly important in veterinary practice as in human medicine.

There are few studies that have quantitatively measured SDM in veterinary health care, and the relationship between SDM and consultation satisfaction is unknown.

The purpose of this study was to investigate the status of SDM implementation in veterinary hospitals and the relationship between SDM implementation and consultation satisfaction among pet owners.

We conducted a cross-sectional study using self-administered questionnaires among pet owners and veterinarians.

In total, 77 pet owners who visited a veterinary clinic and 14 veterinarians at the clinics participated in this study.

After a veterinary clinic visit, owners were asked to rate their decision-making preferences using the Shared Decision Making Questionnaire for patients (SDM-Q-9) adapted for veterinary medicine, as well as their satisfaction with the consultation.

The corresponding veterinarians were asked to complete the veterinary version of the survey (SDM-Q-Doc).

RESULTS: Most pet owners (64.9%) preferred SDM in veterinary consultations.

Cronbach's alpha coefficient of 0.84 for the veterinary SDM-Q-9 and 0.89 for the veterinary SDM-Q-Doc both confirmed high reliability.

The Spearman's correlation coefficient between the SDM-Q-9 and consultation satisfaction was 0.526 (p < 0.001), which was significant.

The SDM-Q-Doc was not significantly correlated with either the SDM-Q-9 or pet owner consultation satisfaction.

We conducted a sensitivity analysis of correlations among veterinarians; responses on the SDM-Q-Doc to examine the association between the SDM-Q-Doc and SDM-Q-9 and owner satisfaction; the results remained the same and no association was found.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that evaluation of SDM among pet owners was associated with their satisfaction with veterinary consultation.

Veterinarians may be able to improve the satisfaction level of pet owners by adopting a consultation method that increases SDM.

We did not consider the content of veterinary care or the number of visits to the veterinary clinic; future studies should be conducted to confirm the validity of our results.

Ito, Yuma,Ishikawa, Hirono,Suzuki, Asuka,Kato, Mio, 2022, The relationship between evaluation of shared decision-making by pet owners and veterinarians and satisfaction with veterinary consultations, BioMed Central

Document

Open Open

Share

Source

Articles recommended by ES/IODE AI

High-Frequency Repetitive Magnetic Stimulation at the Sacrum Alleviates Chronic Constipation in Parkinson’s Patients
magnetic stimulation parkinson’s significant patients scale sacrum pd hf-rms chronic constipation scores
The mechanism of PFK-1 in the occurrence and development of bladder cancer by regulating ZEB1 lactylation
bladder cancer pfk-1 zeb1 lactylation glycolysis inhibits lactate glucose bc pfk-1 cancer lactylation cells bladder