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. 2016 Jul;99(7):1106-1120.
doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2016.02.011. Epub 2016 Feb 23.

Communication and decision-making in mental health: A systematic review focusing on Bipolar disorder

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Communication and decision-making in mental health: A systematic review focusing on Bipolar disorder

Alana Fisher et al. Patient Educ Couns. 2016 Jul.

Abstract

Objectives: To systematically review studies of communication and decision-making in mental health-based samples including BP patients.

Methods: Qualitative systematic review of studies using PsychINFO, MEDLINE, SCOPUS, CINAHL, and EMBASE (January 2000-March 2015). One author assessed study eligibility, verified by two co-authors. Data were independently extracted by two authors, and cross-checked by another co-author. Two independent raters assessed eligible studies using a validated quality appraisal.

Results: Of 519 articles retrieved, 13 studies were included (i.e., 10 quantitative/1 qualitative/1 mixed-methods). All were cross-sectional; twelve were rated good/strong quality (>70%). Four inter-related themes emerged: patient characteristics and patient preferences, quality of patient-clinician interactions, and influence of SDM/patient-centred approach on patient outcomes. Overall BP patients, like others, have unmet decision-making needs, and desire greater involvement. Clinician consultation behaviour influenced patient involvement; interpersonal aspects (e.g., empathy, listening well) fostered therapeutic relationships and positive patient outcomes, including: improved treatment adherence, patient satisfaction with care, and reduced suicidal ideation.

Conclusions: This review reveals a paucity of studies reporting bipolar-specific findings. To inform targeted BP interventions, greater elucidation of unmet decision-making needs is needed.

Practice implications: Eliciting patient preferences and developing a collaborative therapeutic alliance may be particularly important in BP, promoting improved patient outcomes.

Keywords: Bipolar disorder; Communication; Decision-making; Patient involvement; Patient outcomes; Treatment.

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