1 / 35

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Group Elizabeth Gibbons Senior Research Officer

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Group Elizabeth Gibbons Senior Research Officer elizabeth.gibbons@dphpc.ox.ac.uk http://phi.uhce.ox.ac.uk/. Overview. PROM Group Oxford Outline of what PROMs are Criteria for selection Examples UK context Discussion. History of group. DPHPC

akiva
Download Presentation

Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Group Elizabeth Gibbons Senior Research Officer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Group Elizabeth Gibbons Senior Research Officer elizabeth.gibbons@dphpc.ox.ac.uk http://phi.uhce.ox.ac.uk/

  2. Overview • PROM Group Oxford • Outline of what PROMs are • Criteria for selection • Examples • UK context • Discussion

  3. History of group • DPHPC • Part of National Centre for Health Outcomes Development (NCHOD) and funded by the Department of Health through the NHS Information Centre for Health and Social Care. • Now core funding from DH

  4. Web resources • systematic reviewsof PROMs relevant to specific disease and population groups • bibliographic database (up to 2005) comprising over 16000 records relating to PROMs with keyword search facility • general information on instrument selection • links to related websites including instruments, resources, organisations, research groups, and journals • information about the Oxford Orthopaedic scores including PDFs of the questionnaires and guides to their usage.

  5. What are PROMs? • Patient’s or public’s reports of health • Obtained by questionnaire: • Self-completed • Interview • Computer terminal • Internet • Palm held devices • Mobile phones

  6. Dimensions • Physical function • Symptoms • Global judgments of health • Psychological well-being • Social well-being • Cognitive function • Role activities • Personal constructs (eg stigma, satisfaction with bodily appearance) • Satisfaction with care Fitzpatrick R., Davey C, Buxton M., Jones D., Evaluating patient-based outcome measures for use in clinical trials. Health Technology Assessment 1998; 2: (14)1-74.

  7. Type of PROM • Generic -SF-36 • Condition-specific -Audit of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life/ADDQoL • Population-specific -Child Health Questionnaire • Dimension-specific -psychological well-being: Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) • Utility measure -EQ-5D • Individualised measure -Patient Generated Index

  8. Generic vs Specific • Generic/utility relevant to broader groups of patients • Condition-specific more sensitive to specific problems Commonly recommended to use both

  9. What are patient-reported outcome measures for? • Individual patient care ~ ? Disease-specific • Clinical effectiveness-RCTs ~ generic and/or disease-specific • Cost effectiveness / cost utility ~EQ-5D utility value to construct a QALY • Evaluation of services~ ?

  10. Patient-reported outcome measures • Systematic search of 11 major databases • 1275 separate instruments in 2002 • 3215 separate instruments in 2007

  11. 2500 2000 1999 1500 Cummulative number of records 1000 2005 500 0 Elderly Cancer Diabetes Paed/adol Respiratory Rheu/musc Neurological Mental health Cardiovascular Population or health condition Evaluation of bibliography

  12. Instrument type 1999 & 2005

  13. Choosing an instrument • A potentially complex task • Structured reviews of evidence • Selection criteria • Web-based advice: http://phi.uhce.ox.ac.uk/ http://www.proqolid.org/ • NHS Guidance: currently PROMs for elective procedures in acute services

  14. Structured reviews • Chronic conditions (2006; 2009) • Breast and prostate cancer • Kidney • Children • Mental health • Elective procedures

  15. Review methodology • Fitzpatrick R., Davey C, Buxton M., Jones D., Evaluating patient-based outcome measures for use in clinical trials. Health Technology Assessment 1998; 2: (14)1-74. • LSHTM (2004) Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) for routine use in Treatment Centres:recommendations based on a review of the scientific evidence. • Terwee (2007) Quality criteria were proposed for measurement properties of health status questionnaires. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 60 (34-42)

  16. Methods for establishing a PROM • Clarify goal of proposed instrument • Generate items from patient-oriented interviews, focus groups • Item selection • Formatting and testing of format of instrument • Studies to examine measurement properties

  17. Measurement properties • Reliability: Does the instrument produce results that are reproducible and internally consistent? • Validity: Does the instrument measure what it claims to measure? • Content validity: Qualitative evidence

  18. Measurement properties Construct validity: • High correlations between the scale and relevant constructs preferably based on a priori hypothesis with predicted strength of correlation • Statistically significant differences between known groups and/or a difference of expected magnitude

  19. Measurement properties • Responsiveness: Does the instrument detect changes over time that matter to patients? ~ Statistically significant changes on scores from pre to post-treatment and/or difference of expected magnitude • Precision How precise are the scores of the instrument? ~ Floor/ceiling effects for summary scores <15%

  20. Measurement properties Interpretability How interpretable are the scores of the instrument? Clinically important difference- minimally important difference

  21. Operational characteristics • Acceptability:Low levels of incomplete data or non-response • Feasibility/burden:Reasonable time and resources to collect, process and analyse the data

  22. Appraisal • Rate quality of evidence for each instrument identified in relation to each of key criteria • Reliability, validity, responsiveness, interpretability, acceptability, feasibility

  23. Appraisal • Each aspect for each instrument rated on 5 point scale: 0 No evidence _ Negative evidence + Limited evidence in favour ++ Some good evidence in favour +++ Good evidence in favour

  24. Examples • Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)- QOF-DEP2 • Audit of Diabetes-Dependant Quality Of Life (ADDQoL) • Euroqol-EQ-5D

  25. Scoring PHQ • Scores range from 0 to 27 with a three point scale for the 9 items. • Mild depression is considered with scores of 5 to 9 • Moderate for scores between 10 and 14 • Severe, 20 to 27 (Spitzer et al., 1999).

  26. Views of patients and GPs Routine implementation of measures of the severity of depression (PHQ, HADS, BDI) • GPs were cautious about the validity and utility and doubtful about the motives behind their implementation. GPs considered that clinical experience was more important in identifying cases and assessment of the severity of depression. Objective measurement reduced the humanistic aspect of the consultation as well as de-skilling doctors • Patients on the other hand were positive about the utility of the measures and viewed the process as a structured adjunct to the consultation. GPs were more attentive to their problems. Some patients reported that the questionnaires were useful in helping them think about their depression and enable them to express themselves better. (Dowrick et al., 2009)

  27. Others • ADDQoL-conceptual issues • EQ-5D Brevity vs comprehensiveness of items

  28. UK DH Policy • Lord Darzi’s Interim Report on the future of the NHS recommends that (PROMs) should have a greater role in the NHS. ‘It could be useful to build on recent advances in measuring outcomes as assessed by patients themselves, and make these patient-reported outcome measures a stronger part of the approach to quality’. • The new Standard NHS Contract for Acute Services includes a requirement to report on evidence from PROMs from April 2009.

  29. Current policy • For the first-time payments to NHS hospitals will be adjusted according to patient satisfaction and health outcomes.

  30. LTC Pilot study • Pilot evaluation of the feasibility of collecting PROM data in primary care • Six LTCs: asthma, COPD, diabetes, epilepsy, heart failure, stroke Reviews Postal survey Interviews with non-responders Interviews with GPs. commissioners

  31. Impact of PROMs: the commissioners of services • PROMs in the context of routine measuring of quality of NHS trusts • Will raise an number of interesting methodological challenges if they are to inform decisions about quality • PROMs less clearly understood outside the context of research-based RCTs where role is clearer

  32. The Office Department of Public Health

More Related