Shared decision-making in urinary reconstruction among radical cystectomy patients: a thematic analysis of patient and provider perspectives in China
Wang Li, Yiqin Shi, Liping Pu, Junyong Zhang, Mingyan He, Jianxia Chen, Xiaoqin Huang

TL;DR
The study explores how patients and doctors in China make decisions together about urinary reconstruction after bladder cancer surgery.
Contribution
This study is the first to explore shared decision-making barriers and facilitators in urinary reconstruction among radical cystectomy patients in China.
Findings
Four main themes were identified: decision autonomy, information understanding, professional expertise, and social security.
Health literacy gaps and clinician workload are major barriers to shared decision-making in China.
Interventions like education and policy reforms are needed to improve collaborative decision-making.
Abstract
Shared decision-making (SDM) improves outcomes in urinary reconstruction after radical cystectomy, but its implementation in China remains understudied. This qualitative study explores SDM barriers and facilitators from patient and provider perspectives. This study employed purposive sampling to recruit healthcare professionals and patients undergoing radical cystectomy from a single tertiary hospital. A qualitative approach involving semi-structured interviews was used to capture participants’ perspectives. Thematic analysis was applied to identify key themes and subthemes. A total of 11 healthcare professionals and 15 patients with bladder cancer participated. Thematic analysis identified 4 main themes and 15 subthemes. (1) Decision autonomy and experience: encompassing patients’ participation levels, confidence, and anxiety, and providers’ attention to patient trust and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPatient-Provider Communication in Healthcare · Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues · Bladder and Urothelial Cancer Treatments
