The goal of this multi-center randomized controlled trial is to determine if the clinical decision aid (BCT Aid) works to help breast cancer patients participate in decision-making and make high-quality decisions, thereby improving the rate of breast-conserving surgery and quality of life. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does the BCT Aid significantly increase the rate of breast-conserving surgery compared to usual care? Does the BCT Aid reduce decision conflict and decision regret, while improving shared decision-making and quality of life? Does the BCT Aid demonstrate better cost-effectiveness in terms of health resource utilization? Researchers will compare the BCT Aid to usual care (standard clinical consultation) to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of BCT Aid. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to either the intervention group (receiving the BCT Aid intervention for 6 months) or the control group (usual care). Complete assessments including decision conflict and shared decision-making at baseline (T0), post-consultation with the surgeon (T1), 6 months (T2, post-intervention), and 12 months (T3, 6 months post-intervention), decision regret at T2 and T3, and quality of life at T0, T2, and T3, with additional EQ-5D-5L measurements at baseline, 3, 6, 9, and 12 months for cost-effectiveness analysis. Have clinical outcomes (breast-conserving surgery rate) and health resource utilization data collected from medical records.
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Decision conflict
Timeframe: At baseline (T0), post-consultation with the surgeon (T1), 6 months (T2, post-intervention), and 12 months (T3, 6 months post-intervention).