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      Shared Decision Making in an Integrated Mental Health and Vocational Rehabilitation Intervention: Stakeholder Practices and Experiences

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          Abstract

          Introduction:

          A Danish integrated mental health care and vocational intervention was developed to support the return-to-work process for people with common mental disorders. Shared decision making was a core element of the intervention to ensure a person-centred approach. The study aim is to describe how shared decision making was practiced and experienced and to discuss its potential in this integrated care context.

          Theory and methods:

          Shared decision making practice and experience was studied in participant observation (n = 20), interviews (n = 12), focus groups interviews (n = 2), and shared plan documents (n = 12). Research methods and analyses were guided by theoretically defined ideals of shared decision making.

          Results:

          Shared decision making constituted a general value rather than a structured method in practice. Clients experienced a more person-centred collaboration with professionals, compared to the regular vocational system. Contextual factors regarding vocational legislation and the intervention design influenced the decision latitude.

          Conclusion:

          Shared decision making has the potential to support a person-centred approach in integrated services. However, we recommend clarifying decisions applicable for shared decision making, to ensure thorough training, develop and test decision aids, and ensure supportive organisational conditions for shared decision making in interprofessional collaboration.

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          Most cited references35

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          Shared Decision Making: A Model for Clinical Practice

          The principles of shared decision making are well documented but there is a lack of guidance about how to accomplish the approach in routine clinical practice. Our aim here is to translate existing conceptual descriptions into a three-step model that is practical, easy to remember, and can act as a guide to skill development. Achieving shared decision making depends on building a good relationship in the clinical encounter so that information is shared and patients are supported to deliberate and express their preferences and views during the decision making process. To accomplish these tasks, we propose a model of how to do shared decision making that is based on choice, option and decision talk. The model has three steps: a) introducing choice, b) describing options, often by integrating the use of patient decision support, and c) helping patients explore preferences and make decisions. This model rests on supporting a process of deliberation, and on understanding that decisions should be influenced by exploring and respecting “what matters most” to patients as individuals, and that this exploration in turn depends on them developing informed preferences.
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              Shared decision making: Concepts, evidence, and practice

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Senior researcher
                Role: Senior Consultant
                Journal
                Int J Integr Care
                Int J Integr Care
                1568-4156
                International Journal of Integrated Care
                Ubiquity Press
                1568-4156
                30 November 2020
                Oct-Dec 2020
                : 20
                : 4
                : 18
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University College Copenhagen, Institute of Nursing and Nutrition, Copenhagen, DK
                [2 ]Centre for Relationships and De-escalation, Mental Health Services Region Zealand, Slagelse, DK
                [3 ]Mental Health Services East, Psychiatry Region Zealand, Roskilde, DK
                [4 ]Copenhagen Research Center for Mental Health – CORE, Rehabilitation, Recovery and Shared Care, Mental Health Center Copenhagen, Mental Health Services in Capital Region of Denmark, Hellerup, DK
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Kathrine Hoffmann Pii ( kapi@ 123456kp.dk )
                Article
                10.5334/ijic.5509
                7716790
                87a902bd-468c-4797-8125-5a06bf2d887b
                Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s)

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 27 March 2020
                : 28 October 2020
                Categories
                Research and Theory

                Health & Social care
                shared decision making,integrated care,mental health care,vocational rehabilitation,common mental disorders

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