
The SHARE Approach - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
AHRQ’s SHARE Approach is a clinician-led shared decision-making model with five essential elements for meaningful dialogue with patients exploring benefits, harms, and risks of options …
Shared Decision Making - Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Measures and data to conduct and opportunities to fund research on shared decision making. View shared decision making resources from AHRQ and other agencies and organizations.
The SHARE Approach: Shared Decisionmaking Tools and Training
Resource: The SHARE Approach—Essential Steps of Shared Decisionmaking: Quick Reference Guide (PDF, 4 MB; 8 pages)
The SHARE Approach is a five-step process for shared decision making that includes exploring and comparing the benefits, harms, and risks of each option through meaningful dialogue …
The SHARE Approach | The Academy - Agency for Healthcare …
A five-step process for shared decision making that uses dialogue to compare the benefits, harms, and risks of each option to help explore what matters most to the patient.
Generalized shared decision making approaches and patient
Methods: The U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality developed SHARE as a generalized SDM approach. We sought to adapt SHARE to the different problems that patients …
This tool was designed to help you incorporate the SHARE Approach from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) into your practice. It describes each step in the …
The SHARE Approach presents a five-step process for shared decision making that includes exploring and comparing the benefits, harms, and risks of each healthcare option through …
The SHARE Approach is a 1-day training program developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to help health care professionals work with patients to make the …
Generalized shared decision making approaches and patient …
In 2015 AHRQ, released the SHARE Approach , a generalized SDM model that streamlined the nine essential steps of SDM identified by Makoul and Clayman into five steps, each …