Shaping an Effective Health Information Website on Rare Diseases Using a Group Decision-Making Tool: Inclusion of the Perspectives of Patients, Their Family Members, and Physicians

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/4800
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/4843
dc.contributor.author Babac, Ana ger
dc.contributor.author Litzkendorf, Svenja ger
dc.contributor.author Schmidt, Katharina ger
dc.contributor.author Damm, Kathrin ger
dc.contributor.author Frank, Martin ger
dc.contributor.author Schulenburg, Johann-Matthias Graf von der ger
dc.contributor.author Pauer, Frederic ger
dc.date.accessioned 2019-05-16T11:43:39Z
dc.date.available 2019-05-16T11:43:39Z
dc.date.issued 2017
dc.identifier.citation Babac, A. et al: Shaping an Effective Health Information Website on Rare Diseases Using a Group Decision-Making Tool: Inclusion of the Perspectives of Patients, Their Family Members, and Physicians. In: Interactive Journal of Medical Research 6 (2017), Nr. 2, e23. DOI: https://doi.org/10.2196/ijmr.7352 ger
dc.description.abstract Background: Despite diverging definitions on rare conditions, people suffering from rare diseases share similar difficulties. A lack of experience by health professionals, a long wait from first symptoms to diagnosis, scarce medical and scientific knowledge, and unsatisfactory treatment options all trigger the search for health information by patients, family members, and physicians. Examining and systematically integrating stakeholder needs can help design information platforms that effectively support this search. Objective: The aim of this study was to innovate on the group decision-making process involving patients, family members, and physicians for the establishment of a national rare disease Internet platform. We determined differences in the relevance of health information—especially examining quantifiable preference weights—between these subgroups and elucidated the structure and distribution of these differences in people suffering from rare diseases, their family members, and physicians, thus providing information crucial to their collaboration. Methods: The included items were identified using a systematic Internet research and verified through a qualitative interview study. The identified major information needs included medical issues, research, social help offers, and current events. These categories further comprised sublevels of diagnosis, therapy, general disease pattern, current studies, study results, registers, psychosocial counseling, self-help, and sociolegal advice. The analytic hierarchy process was selected as the group decision-making tool. A sensitivity analysis was used to determine the stability and distribution of results. t tests were utilized to examine the results’ significance. Results: A total of 176 questionnaires were collected; we excluded some questionnaires in line with our chosen consistency level of 0.2. Ultimately, 120 patients, 24 family members, and 32 physicians participated in the study (48 men and 128 women, mean age=48 years, age range=17-87 years). Rankings and preference weights were highly heterogeneous. Global ranking positions of patients, family members, and physicians are shown in parentheses, as follows: medical issues (3/4, 4, 4), research (3/4, 2/3, 3), social help offers (1, 2/3, 2), and current events (2, 1, 1); diagnosis (6, 8, 9), therapy (5, 9, 7), general disease pattern (9, 4/5/6, 6), current studies (7, 4/5/6, 3), study results (8, 7, 8), registers (4, 1, 5), psychosocial counseling (1, 2, 4), self-help (3, 3, 2), and sociolegal advice (2, 4/5/6, 1). Differences were verified for patients for 5 information categories (P=.03), physicians for 6 information categories (P=.03), and family members for 4 information categories (P=.04). Conclusions: Our results offer a clear-cut information structure that can transparently translate group decisions into practice. Furthermore, we found different preference structures for rare disease information among patients, family members, and physicians. Some websites already address differences in comprehension between those subgroups. Similar to pharmaceutical companies, health information providers on rare diseases should also acknowledge different information needs to improve the accessibility of information. ger
dc.language.iso eng ger
dc.publisher College Park : American Physical Society
dc.relation.ispartofseries Interactive Journal of Medical Research 6 (2017), Nr. 2 ger
dc.rights CC BY 4.0 Unported
dc.rights.uri https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subject rare diseases eng
dc.subject decision making eng
dc.subject health information needs eng
dc.subject preferences eng
dc.subject relatives eng
dc.subject physicians eng
dc.subject.ddc 610 | Medizin, Gesundheit ger
dc.title Shaping an Effective Health Information Website on Rare Diseases Using a Group Decision-Making Tool: Inclusion of the Perspectives of Patients, Their Family Members, and Physicians ger
dc.type Article ger
dc.type Text ger
dc.relation.isbn 1929-073X
dc.relation.doi https://doi.org/10.2196/ijmr.7352
dc.bibliographicCitation.firstPage e23
dc.description.version publishedVersion ger
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich


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