Barr Paul J, Berry Scott A, Gozansky Wendolyn S, McQuillan Deanna B, Ross Colleen, Carmichael Don, Austin Andrea M, Satterlund Travis D, Schifferdecker Karen E, Council Lora, Dannenberg Michelle D, Wampler Ariel T, Nelson Eugene C, Skinner Jonathan
The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice, Dartmouth College, One Medical Center Drive, Lebanon, NH, 03756, USA.
Institute for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, 10065 E. Harvard Ave, Denver, CO, 80231, USA.
J Patient Rep Outcomes. 2020 Mar 2;4(1):17. doi: 10.1186/s41687-020-0183-5.
It is unclear whether data from patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are captured and used by clinicians despite policy initiatives. We examined the extent to which fall risk and urinary incontinence (UI) reported on PROMS and provided to clinicians prior to a patient visit are subsequently captured in the electronic medical record (EMR). Additionally, we aimed to determine whether the use of PROMs and EMR documentation is higher for visits where PROM data was provided to clinicians.
We conducted a cross-sectional patient-reported risk assessment survey and semi-structured interviews with clinicians to identify themes related to the use of PROMs.
Fourteen primary care clinics in the US (eight intervention and six control clinics), between October 2013 and May 2015.
Primary care clinicians and older adult (≥66 years) patients completing a 46-item health risk assessment, including PROMs for fall risk and UI.
Risk assessment results provided to the clinician or nurse practitioners prior to the clinic visit in intervention clinics; data was not provided in control clinics.
A total of 505 older adult patients were included in the study, 176 at control clinics and 329 at intervention clinics. While patient reports of fall risk and UI were readily captured by PROMs, this information was only coded in the EMR between 3% - 14% of the time (poor Kappa agreement). Intervention clinics performed slightly better than control clinics. Clinician interviews (n = 16) revealed low use of PROMs data with multiple barriers cited including poor access to data, high quantity of data, interruption to workflow, and a lack of training on PROMs.
Current strategies of providing PROMs data prior to clinic visits may not be an effective way of communicating important health information to busy clinicians; ultimately resulting in underuse. Better systems of presenting PROMs data, and clinician training on the importance of PROMs and their use, is needed.
尽管有相关政策举措,但目前尚不清楚临床医生是否获取并使用了患者报告结局测量(PROMs)的数据。我们调查了在患者就诊前通过PROMs报告并提供给临床医生的跌倒风险和尿失禁(UI)数据随后在电子病历(EMR)中被记录的程度。此外,我们旨在确定在向临床医生提供PROMs数据的就诊中,PROMs和EMR记录的使用情况是否更高。
我们开展了一项横断面患者报告风险评估调查,并对临床医生进行了半结构化访谈,以确定与PROMs使用相关的主题。
2013年10月至2015年5月期间,在美国的14家初级保健诊所(8家干预诊所和6家对照诊所)。
完成46项健康风险评估的初级保健临床医生和老年(≥66岁)患者,评估内容包括跌倒风险和UI的PROMs。
在干预诊所就诊前,将风险评估结果提供给临床医生或执业护士;对照诊所不提供数据。
1)EMR中跌倒风险或UI的国际疾病分类第九版(ICD - 9)编码与患者报告之间的一致性,以及2)临床医生对PROMs使用的体验及其对编码的影响。
共有505名老年患者纳入研究,176名在对照诊所,329名在干预诊所。虽然PROMs能够轻松获取患者关于跌倒风险和UI的报告,但这些信息仅在3% - 14%的时间内被编码到EMR中(卡帕一致性较差)。干预诊所的表现略优于对照诊所。临床医生访谈(n = 16)显示,PROMs数据的使用率较低,原因包括数据获取不便、数据量过大、工作流程中断以及缺乏PROMs相关培训等多种障碍。
目前在就诊前提供PROMs数据的策略可能不是向忙碌的临床医生传达重要健康信息的有效方式;最终导致使用不足。需要更好的PROMs数据呈现系统,以及针对临床医生关于PROMs重要性及其使用方法的培训。