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一种让非专业人士能够评估药物疑似副作用的工具的开发与初步验证。

Development and preliminary validation of an instrument to enable laypersons to assess suspected side effects from medicines.

作者信息

O'Donovan Bernadine, Rodgers Ruth M, Cox Anthony R, Krska Janet

机构信息

Histopathology, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.

Medway School of Pharmacy, Universities of Kent and Greenwich at Medway, Kent, UK.

出版信息

Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf. 2019 Jul;28(7):1023-1031. doi: 10.1002/pds.4841. Epub 2019 Jun 13.

Abstract

PURPOSE

Research into causality assessment tools enabling patients to assess suspected adverse drug reactions (ADRs) is limited. Supporting patients with tools could improve their confidence in discussions with health professionals and encourage reporting of suspected ADRs to regulators. This study describes development and preliminary validation of an instrument: Side Effect Patient ASsessment Tool (SE-PAST).

METHODS

SE-PAST was developed from survey and interview data involving patients experiencing suspected ADRs. It included 10 statements enabling causality assessment, covering timing, additional information sources, and experiences, with four options: yes/no/don't know/not applicable. Scoring and weighting resulted in four categories of causal association: highly probable, probable, possible, unlikely. Validation involved obtaining feedback from 31 individuals experiencing an ADR. Further validation involved online distribution through patient support groups and comparison of reported symptoms to known ADRs.

RESULTS

Validators found SE-PAST easy to read (31), to understand (27), and to complete (29). A total of 294 respondents completed SE-PAST online, with 98% completing eight or more causality assessment statements. Symptoms were categorised as highly probable (46; 16%), probable (80; 62%), possible (44; 15%), and unlikely (21; 7%). A total of 221 respondents identified one suspected medicine, with 95% of these reporting at least one symptom known to be an ADR. Of 227 providing feedback, 139 (61%) found SE-PAST useful, 160 (71%) felt motivated to discuss their experience with a health professional, and 136 (60%) were encouraged to report to the regulator.

CONCLUSION

SE-PAST was easily completed and understood by people experiencing suspected ADRs and could be useful in encouraging patient reporting to health professionals and agencies.

摘要

目的

关于使患者能够评估疑似药物不良反应(ADR)的因果关系评估工具的研究有限。为患者提供相关工具可以增强他们与医疗专业人员讨论时的信心,并鼓励他们向监管机构报告疑似ADR。本研究描述了一种工具的开发和初步验证:副作用患者评估工具(SE-PAST)。

方法

SE-PAST是根据涉及经历疑似ADR患者的调查和访谈数据开发的。它包括10条用于因果关系评估的陈述,涵盖时间、其他信息来源和经历,有四个选项:是/否/不知道/不适用。评分和加权得出四类因果关联:极有可能、很可能、可能、不太可能。验证包括从31名经历过ADR的个体获取反馈。进一步验证包括通过患者支持小组进行在线分发,并将报告的症状与已知ADR进行比较。

结果

验证者发现SE-PAST易于阅读(31人)、易于理解(27人)和易于完成(29人)。共有294名受访者在线完成了SE-PAST,98%的人完成了八条或更多因果关系评估陈述。症状被分类为极有可能(46例;16%)、很可能(80例;62%)、可能(44例;15%)和不太可能(21例;7%)。共有221名受访者确定了一种疑似药物,其中95%的人报告了至少一种已知为ADR的症状。在227名提供反馈的人中,139人(61%)认为SE-PAST有用,160人(71%)有动力与医疗专业人员讨论他们的经历,136人(60%)受到鼓励向监管机构报告。

结论

SE-PAST易于经历疑似ADR的人完成和理解,可能有助于鼓励患者向医疗专业人员和机构报告。

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