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SC-0216Evidence: under reviewShrink Connectingapplied

Shared Decision-Making

Evidence guides decisions. Values personalize them.

Shrink Definition

Shared decision-making is a collaborative process in which clinicians and patients work together to make healthcare decisions by integrating the best available scientific evidence with the patient's values, preferences, goals, and circumstances. Shared decision-making recognizes that many healthcare decisions involve more than one reasonable option. Rather than directing decisions unilaterally, clinicians help patients understand the benefits, risks, uncertainties, and alternatives so that informed decisions can be made together. The goal isn't simply patient satisfaction. The goal is informed, evidence-based, patient-centered care.

Plain language

Good healthcare decisions are made together.

Shrink Insight

The best medical decision for one person may not be the best decision for another with different goals or priorities.

Why it matters

Shared decision-making contributes to: • psychiatry • primary care • surgery • oncology • chronic disease management • preventive medicine • patient engagement Research has associated shared decision-making with improved patient understanding, greater engagement, and decisions that more closely reflect patient preferences.

Common misunderstanding

Shared decision-making doesn't mean every option is medically appropriate. Clinicians continue to provide professional recommendations while respecting patient autonomy.

Shrink Perspective

The clinician contributes expertise. The patient contributes lived experience, values, and goals. Both perspectives matter.

Shrink Reflection

Think about an important healthcare decision. Did you understand the available options? Did you feel comfortable asking questions?

Shrink Journal

Describe a time when collaboration improved an important decision. What made that conversation successful?

Shrink Step

When discussing an important decision, ask: "What are my options?" "What are the benefits and risks of each?" "How does each option fit my goals?"

Shrink Minute

Good decisions are informed together.

Shrink Takeaway

Collaboration improves care.

Medical boundary

This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.

Evidence summary

Shared decision-making is recommended by numerous medical organizations and has become a central component of patient-centered care. Research supports its role in improving patient knowledge, engagement, and alignment between medical decisions and patient values. Medical Boundary Shared decision-making applies when multiple medically reasonable options exist. Emergency situations or impaired decision-making capacity may require different approaches.

Sources

American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature

Reference status: authorities listed citation pending