Article Text

Download PDFPDF
Using Option Grids: a referee's commentary
  1. Mark Manford
  1. Correspondence to Dr Mark Manford, Addenbrooke's Hospital Neurology Hills Rd, Cambridge CB20QQ, UK; mark.manford{at}me.com

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

In 2012, the UK's National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE)1 stated that clinicians should ensure that: ‘Patients are actively involved in shared decision making and supported by healthcare professionals to make fully informed choices about investigations, treatment and care that reflect what is important to them’. The authors of this paper provide a useful means of giving information to patients, which is part of a process with complex technical and philosophical aspects, and suggest how clinicians should behave in the encounter.

What the authors describe is attractive. If patients could weigh up the information and apply it to their circumstances using a personalised information grid, then we clinicians could sit back and let them get on with it. But, let us explore this example further.

Patients come with baggage, including the understandable fear of scary brain surgery—which is a hurdle they have to overcome—rather than continuing medical treatment, which somehow seems easier, especially in the light of limited personal experience (Aunt Maude was never the same again after that unrelated brain operation). Of course, the decision is ultimately a contextualised and emotional one …

View Full Text

Footnotes

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Commissioned; internally peer reviewed.

Linked Articles

  • Editors' choice
    Phil Smith Geraint N Fuller
  • How to do it
    Robert P Seal Jeremy Kynaston Glyn Elwyn Philip E M Smith

Other content recommended for you