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临床环境中烧伤特异性患者报告结局测量的实时反馈是否实用且有用?一项实施青年成人烧伤结局问卷的试点研究。

Is Real-Time Feedback of Burn-Specific Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Clinical Settings Practical and Useful? A Pilot Study Implementing the Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaire.

作者信息

Ryan Colleen M, Lee Austin F, Kazis Lewis E, Shapiro Gabriel D, Schneider Jeffrey C, Goverman Jeremy, Fagan Shawn P, Wang Chao, Kim Julia, Sheridan Robert L, Tompkins Ronald G

机构信息

*Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston; †Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston; ‡Harvard Medical School, Boston; §Shriners Hospital for Children-Boston; ‖Research Center for Statistics and Actuarial Science in Medicine, School of Statistics, Xi'An University of Finance and Economics, Xi'An, China; ¶School of Insurance and Economics, University of International Business and Economics, Beijing, China; #Department of Mathematical Sciences, Bentley University, Waltham, Massachusetts; **Center for the Assessment of Pharmaceutical Practices (CAPP), Department of Health Policy and Management, Boston University School of Public Health; ††Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health, McGill University, Quebec, Canada; and ‡‡Lincoln Memorial University, DeBusk College of Osteopathic Medicine, Harrogate, Tennessee.

出版信息

J Burn Care Res. 2016 Jan-Feb;37(1):64-74. doi: 10.1097/BCR.0000000000000287.

Abstract

Long-term follow-up care of survivors after burn injuries can potentially be improved by the application of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). PROMs can inform clinical decision-making and foster communication between the patient and provider. There are no previous reports using real-time, burn-specific PROMs in clinical practice to track and benchmark burn recovery over time. This study examines the feasibility of a computerized, burn-specific PROM, the Young Adult Burn Outcome Questionnaire (YABOQ), with real-time benchmarking feedback in a burn outpatient practice. The YABOQ was redesigned for formatting and presentation purposes using images and transcribed to a computerized format. The redesigned questionnaire was administered to young adult burn survivors (ages 19-30 years, 1-24 months from injury) via an ipad platform in the office before outpatient visits. A report including recovery curves benchmarked to a nonburned relatively healthy age-matched population and to patients with similar injuries was produced for the domains of physical function and social function limited by appearance. A copy of the domain reports as well as a complete copy of the patient's responses to all domain questions was provided for use during the clinical visit. Patients and clinicians completed satisfaction surveys at the conclusion of the visit. Free-text responses, included in the satisfaction surveys, were treated as qualitative data adding contextual information about the assessment of feasibility. Eleven patients and their providers completed the study for 12 clinical visits. All patients found the ipad survey and report "easy" or "very easy" to use. In nine instances, patients "agreed" or "strongly agreed" that it helped them communicate their situation to their doctor/nurse practitioner. Patients "agreed" or "strongly agreed" that the report helped them understand their course of recovery in 10 visits. In 11 visits, the patients "agreed" or "strongly agreed" that they would recommend this feedback to others. Qualitative comments included: "it helped organize my thoughts of recovery," "it opened lines of communication with the doctor," "it showed me how far I have come, and how far I need to go," and "it raised questions I would not have thought of." Only four of 12 provider surveys agreed that it helped them understand a patient's condition; however, in two visits, the providers stated that it helped identify a pertinent clinical issue. During two visits, providers stated that a treatment plan was discussed or recommended based on the survey results. Separately, qualitative comments from the providers included "survey was not sensitive enough to identify that this patient needed surgery for their scars." This is the first report describing clinical use of a burn-specific patient reported outcome measure. Real-time feedback using the ipad YABOQ was well received for the most part by the clinicians and burn survivors in the outpatient clinic setting. The information provided by the reports can be tested in a future randomized controlled clinical study evaluating impacts on physician decisions.

摘要

应用患者报告结局指标(PROMs)可能会改善烧伤幸存者的长期随访护理。PROMs可为临床决策提供依据,并促进患者与医护人员之间的沟通。此前尚无关于在临床实践中使用实时、特定于烧伤的PROMs来跟踪和衡量烧伤恢复情况的报告。本研究探讨了一种计算机化的、特定于烧伤的PROM——青年成人烧伤结局问卷(YABOQ)在烧伤门诊实践中提供实时基准反馈的可行性。为了格式化和展示目的,使用图像对YABOQ进行了重新设计,并转录为计算机化格式。重新设计后的问卷在门诊就诊前通过办公室的iPad平台发放给青年成人烧伤幸存者(年龄19 - 30岁,受伤后1 - 24个月)。针对因外貌受限的身体功能和社会功能领域,生成了一份报告,其中包括与未烧伤的相对健康的年龄匹配人群以及伤情相似患者的恢复曲线基准对比。在临床就诊期间,会提供各领域报告的副本以及患者对所有领域问题的完整回答副本。患者和医护人员在就诊结束时完成满意度调查。满意度调查中包含的自由文本回复被视为定性数据,为可行性评估增添背景信息。11名患者及其医护人员完成了12次临床就诊的研究。所有患者都认为iPad调查和报告“容易”或“非常容易”使用。在9例中,患者“同意”或“强烈同意”它有助于他们向医生/执业护士说明自己的情况。在10次就诊中,患者“同意”或“强烈同意”该报告有助于他们了解自己的恢复过程。在11次就诊中,患者“同意”或“强烈同意”他们会向他人推荐这种反馈。定性评论包括:“它有助于整理我对恢复的想法”,“它开启了与医生的沟通渠道”,“它让我看到自己已经取得的进展以及还需要走多远”,以及“它提出了我原本不会想到的问题”。在12份医护人员调查问卷中,只有4人同意它有助于他们了解患者的病情;然而,在2次就诊中,医护人员表示它有助于识别一个相关的临床问题。在2次就诊中,医护人员表示根据调查结果讨论或推荐了治疗方案。另外,医护人员的定性评论包括“调查不够敏感,无法识别出该患者需要对其疤痕进行手术”。这是第一份描述特定于烧伤的患者报告结局指标临床应用的报告。在门诊环境中,临床医生和烧伤幸存者大多对使用iPad YABOQ提供的实时反馈表示认可。报告提供的信息可在未来一项评估对医生决策影响的随机对照临床研究中进行检验。

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