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Shared decision-making. A primer for clinicians

  • Glyn Elwyn*
  • , Pål Gulbrandsen
  • , Hannah Leavitt
  • , Eman Abukmail
  • , Marla L. Clayman
  • , Adrian Edwards
  • , Jeanette Finderup
  • , Alana Fisher
  • , Stuart W. Grande
  • , Pola Hahlweg
  • , Tammy Hoffmann
  • , Wen Hsuan Hou
  • , María José Hernández-Leal
  • , Debra Leung
  • , Weiwei Lu
  • , Lars Mandelkow
  • , Kristen E. Pecanac
  • , Arwen H. Pieterse
  • , Amy Price
  • , Jannicke Rabben
  • Paula Riganti, Michael Sanatani, Fülöp Scheibler, Elise Schoefs, Owen A. Taylor, Kathrene D. Valentine, Richard Wexler
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Importance:
Shared decision-making is a widely promoted approach, yet clinicians, typically supportive in principle, find it difficult to implement because of concerns and barriers they commonly encounter in practice.

Objective:
To generate a primer that describes shared decision-making from the perspective of clinicians.

Methods:
We collaborated with clinicians, patient representatives, and health service researchers. We invited members of the International Society of Shared Decision Making to co-produce a primer for clinicians using a series of jointly edited online documents. We shared drafts with other clinicians and patients. Finally, we integrated the contributions until we had arrived at a consensus.

Findings:
Twenty-five people from 13 countries contributed; 9 had medical qualifications, 4 had nursing qualifications, and 12 others had a range of backgrounds. A total of 30 patients and clinicians provided further comments. The description differs from previous versions because it addresses the barriers that clinicians frequently mention. It describes how to overcome common challenges by emphasizing the importance of a clear invitation at initiation; it suggests how to manage patients’ resistance to shouldering decisional responsibility; reinforces the need to allow time for deliberation, especially with other stakeholders; and reassures clinicians that consensus, albeit welcome, need not be the goal of shared decision-making.

Conclusions and Relevance:
This primer portrays a reflective clinician who is aware of power asymmetry, patient vulnerability, risk communication, health literacy, agenda setting, and goal clarification. It envisages a clinician who is curious about personal perspectives and who can offer collaborative, iterative, and deliberative steps.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3889-3899
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of General Internal Medicine
Volume40
Issue number16
Early online date7 Oct 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

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