Department of Orthopaedic and Surgery, Sir HN Reliance Foundation Hospital and Research Centre, Mumbai, India.
NorthShore University Health System Orthopaedic and Spine Institute, Skokie, IL, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2023 Jul 1;481(7):1339-1348. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000002529. Epub 2023 Jan 3.
Patient-reported outcome measures are essential tools in assessing clinical outcomes. Although several patient-reported outcome measures such as the Oxford Knee Score and Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score have been developed and validated, their applicability in the Asian-Indian population may be limited; key cultural differences including varying functional demands, ethnicity-specific necessities, and social expectations represent a unique collection of needs. Such differences include preferences toward ground-level activities and those favoring the manual completion of tasks.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Which activities of daily living (ADLs) do patients in an Asian-Indian population consider the most important? (2) How do the categories of ADLs (personal care, household, work, travel, and recreation) vary among patients of different gender (men and women) and age (< 60 and > 60 years) groups?
A cross-sectional study was conducted in October 2019 at a hospital in Mumbai, India. We developed a questionnaire with five domains for physical activity (personal care, household, work, travel, and recreation) formulated from a review and modification of existing categories identified by the WHO and the American Heart Association. Forty key ADLs were identified according to input obtained from detailed interviews of healthcare providers involved in the care of patients with orthopaedic illness, based on established domains. Respondents were instructed to identify the ADLs that were the most relevant to their lifestyle and culture. Responses from 402 patients (mean age 60 ± 12 years; 51% [206 of 402] were women) were analyzed to identify the most commonly selected ADLs. Responses were further evaluated to understand the impact of gender and age on these preferences by comparing men and women, as well as younger (age < 60 years) and older (age > 60 years) patients.
The three most frequently reported ADLs in each domain, representing the ADLs that were the most important to the Asian-Indian population, were standing without assistance (82% [331 of 402]), getting up with support (81% [324 of 402]), and toilet use (74% [298 of 402]) in the personal activity category; climbing stairs (80% [322 of 402]), sitting cross-legged (80% [320 of 402]), and praying (79% [319 of 402]) in the household activity category; going to the market (72% [291 of 402]), long-distance walking (62% [250 of 402]), and carrying a shopping bag (60% [242 of 402]) in the work activity category; walking on an uneven surface (66% [266 of 402]), using a taxi (61% [247 of 402]), and traveling by train (59% [239 of 402]) in the travel activity category; and yoga (67% [269 of 402]), playing with children (66% [264 of 402]), and indoor games (63% [252 of 402]) in the recreational activity category. The order of importance of ADL domains was identical in the men versus women groups as well as in the younger age versus older age groups; ADL domains with the highest number of selected ADLs in order of decreasing importance were household care, personal care, work, travel, and recreation when analyzed by individual gender and age groups. Women were more likely than men to report the following ADLs as being important: climbing stairs (84% [172 of 206] of women and 77% [150 of 196] of men), getting up without support (83% [171 of 206] of women and 78% [153 of 196] of men), going to the market (74% [152 of 206] of women and 71% [139 of 196] of men), walking on uneven surfaces (67% [139 of 206] of women and 65% [127 of 196] of men), and playing with children (72% [148 of 206] of women and 59% [116 of 196] of men).
The findings of this study aim to help providers engage in personalized and socioculturally relevant discussions about knee arthritis. Highlighted areas of importance may facilitate a more comprehensive preoperative discussion of total joint arthroplasty expectations in the context of the needs and demands of Asian-Indian patients. The findings of this study could establish the groundwork for the development of ethnicity-specific patient-reported outcome measures by incorporating the identified ADLs in novel metrics with validation of face and content validity.Level of Evidence Level III, prognostic study.
患者报告的结局测量是评估临床结局的重要工具。尽管已经开发和验证了几种患者报告的结局测量工具,如牛津膝关节评分和膝关节损伤和骨关节炎结局评分,但它们在亚洲-印度人群中的适用性可能有限;关键的文化差异包括不同的功能需求、特定种族的需求和社会期望,这些都代表了一系列独特的需求。这些差异包括对地面活动的偏好和对手工完成任务的偏好。
问题/目的:(1)亚洲-印度人群认为日常生活活动(ADL)中最重要的是哪些?(2)不同性别(男性和女性)和年龄(< 60 岁和> 60 岁)组的患者在 ADL 类别(个人护理、家庭、工作、旅行和娱乐)方面有何不同?
2019 年 10 月在印度孟买的一家医院进行了一项横断面研究。我们开发了一个包含五个物理活动领域(个人护理、家庭、工作、旅行和娱乐)的问卷,这些领域是从世界卫生组织和美国心脏协会确定的现有类别中回顾和修改而来的。根据参与骨科疾病患者护理的医疗保健提供者的详细访谈,确定了 40 项关键 ADL,基于既定的领域。要求受访者识别与他们的生活方式和文化最相关的 ADL。对 402 名患者(平均年龄 60 ± 12 岁;51%[402 名患者中有 206 名女性]为女性)的回复进行了分析,以确定最常选择的 ADL。通过比较男性和女性,以及年龄较小(< 60 岁)和年龄较大(> 60 岁)的患者,进一步评估这些偏好对性别和年龄的影响。
在每个领域中,三个最常报告的 ADL 代表了亚洲-印度人群最重要的 ADL,分别是:无支撑站立(82%[402 名患者中有 331 名])、支撑起身(81%[402 名患者中有 324 名])和使用厕所(74%[402 名患者中有 298 名]),在个人活动类别中;爬楼梯(80%[402 名患者中有 322 名])、盘腿坐(80%[402 名患者中有 320 名])和祈祷(79%[402 名患者中有 319 名]),在家庭活动类别中;去市场(72%[402 名患者中有 291 名])、长途步行(62%[402 名患者中有 250 名])和携带购物袋(60%[402 名患者中有 242 名]),在工作活动类别中;在不平坦表面行走(66%[402 名患者中有 266 名])、乘坐出租车(61%[402 名患者中有 247 名])和乘坐火车旅行(59%[402 名患者中有 239 名]),在旅行活动类别中;瑜伽(67%[402 名患者中有 269 名])、与儿童玩耍(66%[402 名患者中有 264 名])和室内游戏(63%[402 名患者中有 252 名]),在娱乐活动类别中。男性与女性组以及年轻与老年组的 ADL 领域重要性顺序相同;按个体性别和年龄组分析,ADL 领域中最重要的 ADL 是家庭护理、个人护理、工作、旅行和娱乐。女性比男性更有可能报告以下 ADL 为重要:爬楼梯(84%[206 名女性中有 172 名]和 77%[196 名男性中有 150 名])、无支撑起身(83%[206 名女性中有 171 名]和 78%[196 名男性中有 153 名])、去市场(74%[206 名女性中有 152 名]和 71%[196 名男性中有 139 名])、在不平坦表面行走(67%[206 名女性中有 139 名]和 65%[196 名男性中有 127 名])和与儿童玩耍(72%[206 名女性中有 148 名]和 59%[196 名男性中有 116 名])。
本研究的目的是帮助提供者进行个性化和具有社会文化相关性的讨论,了解膝关节关节炎患者的需求。突出的重要领域可能有助于更全面地讨论亚洲-印度患者全膝关节置换术的期望,同时考虑到他们的需求和期望。本研究的结果可能为制定特定种族的患者报告结局测量奠定基础,即将确定的 ADL 纳入具有验证表面和内容效度的新指标中。
水平的证据水平 III,预后研究。