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Medical Decision Making
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Attitudes of Obstetricians and Gynecologists toward Hormone Replacement Therapy

Jonathan Baron

Gerald B. Holzman

Jay Schulkin

Objective. To determine the attitudes of obstetricians and gynecologists toward hor mone replacement therapy (HRT), and the beliefs and intuitions that affected those attitudes. Design. A questionnaire was sent to 1,000 gynecologists in the United States; 328 replies were received. The questionnaire asked about effects of HRT, practices concerning HRT, and decisions in hypothetical scenarios. Results. The re spondents strongly favored HRT, and they were well informed about its effects on osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, and breast cancer. They were aware of conflict ing findings concerning breast cancer. The strength of their recommendation of HRT was sensitive to patient differences in risk factors. The respondents also showed four biases hypothesized to cause resistance to HRT: omission bias (more concern about harmful acts than harmful omissions); proportionality bias (attention to relative risk rather than risk differences); naturalness bias (preference for the natural); and ambi guity (avoiding options with missing information). Proportion bias, naturalness bias, and (weakly) omission bias were related to less favorable attitudes toward HRT. Con clusion. Although specialists are highly favorable toward HRT in general, some neg ativity toward HRT may result from decision biases. Key words: hormone replacement; estrogen; decision making; biases. (Med Decis Making 1998;18:406-411)

Medical Decision Making, Vol. 18, No. 4, 406-411 (1998)
DOI: 10.1177/0272989X9801800408


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