School of Nursing, Trinity Western University, 7600 Glover Road, Langley, BC, V2Y 1Y1, Canada.
Centre for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, Providence Health Care Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada.
Qual Life Res. 2021 Dec;30(12):3343-3357. doi: 10.1007/s11136-021-02766-9. Epub 2021 Mar 2.
Results of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly used to inform healthcare decision-making. Research has shown that response shift can impact PROM results. As part of an international collaboration, our goal is to provide a framework regarding the implications of response shift at the level of patient care (micro), healthcare institute (meso), and healthcare policy (macro).
Empirical evidence of response shift that can influence patients' self-reported health and preferences provided the foundation for development of the framework. Measurement validity theory, hermeneutic philosophy, and micro-, meso-, and macro-level healthcare decision-making informed our theoretical analysis.
At the micro-level, patients' self-reported health needs to be interpreted via dialogue with the clinician to avoid misinterpretation of PROM data due to response shift. It is also important to consider the potential impact of response shift on study results, when these are used to support decisions. At the meso-level, individual-level data should be examined for response shift before aggregating PROM data for decision-making related to quality improvement, performance monitoring, and accreditation. At the macro-level, critical reflection on the conceptualization of health is required to know whether response shift needs to be controlled for when PROM data are used to inform healthcare coverage.
Given empirical evidence of response shift, there is a critical need for guidelines and knowledge translation to avoid potential misinterpretations of PROM results and consequential biases in decision-making. Our framework with guiding questions provides a structure for developing strategies to address potential impacts of response shift at micro-, meso-, and macro-levels.
患者报告结局测量(PROMs)的结果越来越多地被用于为医疗保健决策提供信息。研究表明,反应转移会影响 PROM 结果。作为国际合作的一部分,我们的目标是提供一个关于反应转移在患者护理(微观)、医疗保健机构(中观)和医疗保健政策(宏观)层面影响的框架。
提供影响患者自我报告健康和偏好的反应转移的实证证据,为框架的发展提供了基础。测量有效性理论、解释学哲学以及微观、中观和宏观医疗保健决策为我们的理论分析提供了信息。
在微观层面,需要通过与临床医生进行对话来解释患者的自我报告健康需求,以避免由于反应转移而对 PROM 数据产生误解。在使用研究结果支持决策时,考虑反应转移对研究结果的潜在影响也很重要。在中观层面,在汇总 PROM 数据以做出与质量改进、绩效监测和认证相关的决策之前,应检查个体层面的数据是否存在反应转移。在宏观层面,需要对健康的概念化进行批判性反思,以了解在使用 PROM 数据为医疗保健覆盖提供信息时,是否需要控制反应转移。
鉴于反应转移的实证证据,迫切需要制定指南和知识转化策略,以避免对 PROM 结果的潜在误解和决策中的潜在偏差。我们的框架和指导问题提供了一个结构,用于制定在微观、中观和宏观层面解决反应转移潜在影响的策略。