Whitebird Robin R, Solberg Leif I, Ziegenfuss Jeanette Y, Norton Christine K, Chrenka Ella A, Swiontkowski Marc, Reams Megan, Grossman Elizabeth S
University of St. Thomas, Morrison Family College of Health, School of Social Work, St. Paul, MN, USA.
HealthPartners Institute, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2022 Apr 1;480(4):680-687. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002059.
Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly promoted for use in routine orthopaedic care with the expectation that if they are made available during encounters, they will be incorporated into clinical practice. We investigated an initiative in which PROMs were systematically collected and provided via the electronic health record but were infrequently used.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: In a qualitative study, we asked: (1) Why are PROM results not being used in clinical care when they are available to surgeons? (2) What aspects of PROMs are seen as useful for clinical care? (3) How are PROMs generally perceived by surgeons and orthopaedic leaders?
A cross-sectional qualitative study was conducted in a single health system in an urban setting using semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of orthopaedic surgeons and leaders who would have substantial knowledge of and experience with the organization's PROM system, which was embedded in the electronic health record and developed for use in clinical care but was not being used. We included surgeons whose practices consisted of at least 90% patients with osteoarthritis, including surgical and nonsurgical management, and thus their patients would be completing PROMs surveys, or surgeons who were leaders in one of the three orthopaedic divisions in the health plan. The senior research manager for orthopaedics identified 14 potential participants meeting these criteria, 11 of whom agreed to study participation. Participants included nine surgeons and two orthopaedic leaders; the majority were men, with a median of 13 years of clinical practice. Study interviews were conducted by an experienced interviewer not known to participants, in private conference rooms in the healthcare setting, and a median (range) of 27 minutes (16 to 40) in length. A content analysis approach was employed for data analysis, with thematic inductive saturation reached in the analysis and attention to trustworthiness and rigor during the analytic process.
Interviewees reported that PROM scores are not being used in patient clinical care because of logistical barriers, such as access and display issues and the time required, and perceptual barriers, such as concerns about patient understanding and the validity and reliability of measures. Surgeons preferred talking with patients about the personal outcomes patients had identified as important; most patients preferred to assess progress toward their own goals than PROMs scores for other people. Surgeons also identified changes that could facilitate PROM use and reduce barriers in clinical care, including pushing PROM scores to physicians' inboxes, developing inserts for physician notes, using easy-to-understand graphical displays, and engaging patients about PROMs earlier in the care process. Participants all agreed that PROMs in aggregate use are valuable for the organization, department, and individual surgeons, but individual patient scores are not.
Despite the availability of PROMs, there are important barriers to incorporating and using PROMs in clinical care. Providing access to PROM scores without clearly understanding how and why surgeons may consider using or incorporating them into their clinical practice can result in expensive and underused systems that add little value for the clinician, patient, or organization.
Involving front-line orthopaedic surgeons and leaders in shaping the design and structure of PROM systems is important for use in clinical care, but these interviewees seemed to see aggregate data as more valuable than individual patient scores.
患者报告结局测量指标(PROMs)在常规骨科护理中的应用越来越受到推广,人们期望在诊疗过程中提供这些指标时,它们将被纳入临床实践。我们调查了一项倡议,在该倡议中,PROMs通过电子健康记录系统地收集并提供,但很少被使用。
问题/目的:在一项定性研究中,我们提出了以下问题:(1)当外科医生能够获取PROM结果时,为什么它们没有被用于临床护理?(2)PROMs的哪些方面被认为对临床护理有用?(3)外科医生和骨科领导者对PROMs的总体看法如何?
在一个城市环境中的单一医疗系统中进行了一项横断面定性研究,采用半结构化访谈,对象是对该组织的PROM系统有丰富知识和经验的骨科外科医生和领导者的目的样本,该系统嵌入电子健康记录中,专为临床护理设计但未被使用。我们纳入了那些至少90%的患者患有骨关节炎的外科医生,包括手术和非手术治疗,因此他们的患者将完成PROMs调查,或者是健康计划中三个骨科部门之一的领导者。骨科高级研究经理确定了14名符合这些标准的潜在参与者,其中11人同意参与研究。参与者包括9名外科医生和2名骨科领导者;大多数是男性,临床实践中位数为13年。研究访谈由一名参与者不认识的经验丰富的访谈者在医疗机构的私人会议室进行,访谈时长中位数(范围)为27分钟(16至40分钟)。采用内容分析法进行数据分析,在分析中达到主题归纳饱和,并在分析过程中关注可信度和严谨性。
受访者报告称,由于后勤障碍,如获取和显示问题以及所需时间,以及认知障碍,如对患者理解以及测量指标的有效性和可靠性的担忧,PROM分数未被用于患者的临床护理。外科医生更喜欢与患者谈论患者认为重要的个人结局;大多数患者更喜欢评估朝着自己目标的进展,而不是其他人的PROM分数。外科医生还确定了可以促进PROM使用并减少临床护理障碍的变化,包括将PROM分数推送到医生收件箱、为医生记录编写插入内容、使用易于理解的图形显示,以及在护理过程中更早地让患者参与PROMs。参与者一致认为,总体使用的PROMs对组织、部门和个体外科医生有价值,但个体患者分数则不然。
尽管有PROMs,但在临床护理中纳入和使用PROMs存在重要障碍。在没有清楚了解外科医生可能如何以及为何考虑使用或将其纳入临床实践的情况下提供PROM分数,可能会导致昂贵且未充分利用的系统,对临床医生、患者或组织几乎没有价值。
让一线骨科外科医生和领导者参与塑造PROM系统的设计和结构对于临床护理的应用很重要,但这些受访者似乎认为汇总数据比个体患者分数更有价值。