Exploring shared surgical decision‐making from the patient’s perspective: is the personality of the surgeon important?

Bisset, C. N., Dames, N., Oliphant, R., Alasadi, A., Anderson, D., Parson, S., Cleland, J. and Moug, S. J. (2020) Exploring shared surgical decision‐making from the patient’s perspective: is the personality of the surgeon important? Colorectal Disease, 22(12), pp. 2214-2221. (doi: 10.1111/codi.15237) (PMID:32628311)

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Abstract

Aim: The aim was to determine the importance of a colorectal surgeon's personality to patients and its influence on their decision-making. Methods: We present a two-part mixed methods study using the Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public (GRIPP-2) long form. Part 1 was an online survey (25 questions) and Part 2 a face-to-face patient and public involvement exercise. Part 1 included patient demographics, details of surgery, overall patient satisfaction (net promoter score) and patient views on surgeon personality (Gosling 10 Item Personality Index). The thematic analysis of free-text responses generated four themes that were taken forward to Part 2. These themes were used to structure focus group discussions on surgeon–patient interactions. Results: Part 1 yielded 296 responses: 72% women, 75.3% UK-based and 55.1% aged 40–59 years. Inflammatory bowel disease (45.3%) and cancer (40.2%) were the main indications. 84.1% of respondents reported satisfaction with their surgical experience (net promoter score). Four key themes were generated from Part 1 and validated in Part 2: (i) surgeon personality stereotypes (media differed from patients' perspective); (ii) favourable and unfavourable surgical personality traits (openness, conscientiousness, emotional stability preferred over risk-taking and narcissism); (iii) patient–surgeon interaction (mutual respect and rapport valued); (iv) impact of surgeon personality on decision-making (majority unaware of second opinion option; management of postoperative complications). Conclusion: Patients believe surgeon personality influences shared decision-making. Low levels of emotional stability and conscientiousness are perceived by patients to increase the likelihood of postoperative adverse events. Further work is required to explore the potential influence of surgeon personality on shared decision-making and postoperative outcomes.

Item Type:Articles
Additional Information:This work was kindly supported by Bowel and Cancer Research and the Ileostomy and Internal Pouch Association.
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Moug, Ms Susan
Authors: Bisset, C. N., Dames, N., Oliphant, R., Alasadi, A., Anderson, D., Parson, S., Cleland, J., and Moug, S. J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name:Colorectal Disease
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:1462-8910
ISSN (Online):1463-1318
Published Online:06 July 2020
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2020 The Authors
First Published:First published in Colorectal Disease 22(12): 2214-2221
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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