To Reconstruct or Not to Reconstruct: Piloting a Vietnamese and Arabic Breast Reconstruction Decision Aid in Australia
Patsy S. Soon, Khouloud Kamalmaz, Verena S. Wu, Neda Karimi, Martha Gerges, Kerry A. Sherman, Afaf Girgis

TL;DR
This study tested decision aids for Vietnamese and Arabic-speaking breast cancer patients in Australia to help them decide about breast reconstruction, finding them generally acceptable and useful.
Contribution
The study introduces and evaluates culturally adapted decision aids for breast reconstruction among Vietnamese and Arabic-speaking women in Australia.
Findings
Participants found the decision aids acceptable and useful for understanding breast reconstruction options.
Areas for improvement included reducing medical jargon and addressing cultural taboos around the word 'breast'.
Arabic-speaking women reported high preparation for decision making with a mean score of 4.8/5.
Abstract
Currently, there are no resources to support culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) women with breast cancer to make decisions about undergoing breast reconstruction (BR). This study evaluated the usability and acceptability of decision aids (DAs) for Vietnamese- and Arabic-speaking women. This two-phase qualitative recruited Vietnamese- (Phase 1) and Arabic-speaking (Phase 2) adult (age ≥ 18 years) women who were diagnosed with breast cancer and could read Vietnamese/Arabic. Women participated in either think-aloud telephone interviews (Phase 1) or semi-structured telephone interviews (Phase 2) and provided feedback on the DA. Interviews were audio-recorded, translated, and transcribed from Vietnamese/Arabic to English, and inductive thematic analysis was undertaken. Additionally, Arabic-speaking women completed the Preparation for Decision Making (PrepDM) scale in Round 2.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPatient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Global Cancer Incidence and Screening · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
