- Both pre-visit and in-visit decision aids improved shared decision-making outcomes for stroke prevention in atrial fibrillation patients.
- The combined use of both decision aids showed significant improvements in patient knowledge and reduction in decisional conflict.
- The study included 1,117 patients across six U.S. academic medical centers.
- The most commonly prescribed treatment for stroke prevention across all groups was direct oral anticoagulants.
- No statistically significant differences between groups were found in treatment choices, patient satisfaction, or length of clinical visits.
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