Department of Emergency Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada; Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada; Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Li Ka Shing Knowledge Institute, St. Michael's Hospital, Toronto, Canada.
Ann Emerg Med. 2020 Aug;76(2):219-229. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2019.12.023. Epub 2020 Mar 12.
Common outcomes of care valued by emergency department (ED) patients who are not hospitalized have been characterized, but no measurement instrument has been developed to date. We developed and validated a patient-reported outcome measure for use with adult ED patients who are discharged home (PROM-ED).
In previous research, 4 main outcomes of importance to ED patients were defined: symptom relief, understanding, reassurance, and having a plan. We developed a bank of potential questions (phase 1) that were first tested for suitability through cognitive debriefing with patients (phase 2). Revised questions were then tested quantitatively with a large panel of participants who had recently received ED care (phase 3). Informed by these results, a panel of experts used a modified Delphi process to make decisions on item reduction. The resulting instrument (PROM-ED 1.0) was then evaluated for its measurement properties (structural validity, hypothesis testing, and reliability).
Sixty-seven questions divided among 4 scales (1 for each outcome domain) were assembled. In accordance with cognitive debriefing with 8 patients (phase 2), 15 questions were modified and 13 removed. Testing of these questions with 444 participants (phase 3) identified problematic floor or ceiling effects (n=10), excessive correlations between items (n=11), and low item-total correlations (n=7). The expert panel (22 participants, phase 4) made decisions using this information on the exclusion of items, resulting in 22 questions across 4 scales that together constitute the PROM-ED 1.0. Testing provided good evidence of validity and test-retest reliability (n=200).
The PROM-ED enables the measurement of patient-centered outcomes of importance to patients receiving care in the ED who are not hospitalized. These data could have important applications in research and care improvement.
已描述急诊科(ED)未住院患者重视的常见护理结局,但迄今尚未开发出衡量这些结局的工具。我们开发并验证了一种适用于从急诊科出院回家的成年 ED 患者的患者报告结局测量工具(PROM-ED)。
在之前的研究中,定义了对 ED 患者很重要的 4 种主要结局:症状缓解、理解、安心和有计划。我们开发了一组潜在问题库(第 1 阶段),首先通过与患者进行认知访谈测试其适宜性(第 2 阶段)。然后,用最近接受过 ED 护理的大量患者对修订后的问题进行定量测试(第 3 阶段)。根据这些结果,一组专家使用改良 Delphi 流程就减少项目做出决策。由此产生的工具(PROM-ED 1.0)随后评估其测量特性(结构有效性、假设检验和可靠性)。
组装了 67 个问题,分为 4 个量表(每个结局领域一个)。根据与 8 名患者的认知访谈(第 2 阶段),修改了 15 个问题并删除了 13 个问题。对 444 名参与者进行这些问题的测试(第 3 阶段),发现有 10 个问题存在地面或天花板效应问题,11 个问题的项目间相关性过高,7 个问题的项目总分相关性过低。专家小组(第 4 阶段,22 名参与者)根据这些信息就项目排除做出决策,最终确定了 4 个量表的 22 个问题,这些问题共同构成了 PROM-ED 1.0。测试提供了良好的有效性和重测信度证据(n=200)。
PROM-ED 可用于衡量在急诊科就诊但未住院的患者重视的患者中心结局。这些数据在研究和护理质量改进方面可能具有重要应用。