Resumen
[EN] Background: Decisions based on erroneous assessments may result in unrealistic
patient and family expectations, suboptimal advice, incorrect treatment, or costlymedical
errors. Regret is a common emotion in daily life that involves counterfactual thinking when
considering alternative choices. Limited information is available on care-related regret
affecting healthcare professionals managing patients with multiple sclerosis (MS).
Methods: We reviewed identified gaps in the literature by searching for the combination
of the following keywords in Pubmed: “regret and decision,” “regret and physicians,” and
“regret and nurses.” An expert panel of neurologists, a nurse, a psychiatrist, a pharmacist,
and a psychometrics specialist participated in the study design. Care-related regret will
be assessed by a behavioral battery including the standardized questionnaire Regret
Intensity Scale (RIS-10) and 15 new specific items. Six items will evaluate regret in the
most common social domains affecting individuals (financial, driving, sports—recreation,
work, own health, and confidence in people). Another nine items will explore past and
recent regret experiences in common situations experienced by healthcare professionals
caring for patients with MS. We will also assess concomitant behavioral characteristics
of healthcare professionals that could be associated with regret: coping strategies,
life satisfaction, mood, positive social behaviors, occupational burnout, and tolerance
to uncertainty.
Planned Outcomes: This is the first comprehensive and standardized protocol
to assess care-related regret and associated behavioral factors among healthcare
professionals managing MS. These results will allow to understand and ameliorate regret
in healthcare professionals.