Department of Community Health Sciences, and O'Brien Institute for Public Health, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada; Department of Psychological Medicine, King's College London, London, UK.
International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement, Boston, MA, USA.
Lancet Psychiatry. 2023 Dec;10(12):966-973. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(23)00265-1. Epub 2023 Sep 25.
The effectiveness of mental health care can be improved through coordinated and wide-scale outcome measurement. The International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement has produced collaborative sets of outcome measures for various mental health conditions, but no universal guideline exists for eating disorders. This Position Paper presents a set of outcomes and measures for eating disorders as determined by 24 international experts from professional and lived experience backgrounds. An adapted Delphi technique was used, and results were assessed through an open review survey. Final recommendations suggest outcomes should be tracked across four domains: eating disorder behaviours and cognitions, physical health, co-occurring mental health conditions, and quality of life and social functioning. Outcomes are collected using three to five patient-reported measures. For children aged between 6 years and 12 years, the measures include the Children's Eating Attitude Test (or, for those with avoidant restrictive food intake disorder, the Eating Disorder in Youth Questionnaire), the KIDSCREEN-10, and the Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Screener-25. For adolescents aged between 13 years and 17 years, the measures include the Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire (EDE-Q; or, for avoidant restrictive food intake disorder, the Nine-Item Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder Screener [NIAS]), the two-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-2), the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), the two-item Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD-2), the seven-item Generalised Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7), and the KIDSCREEN-10. For adults older than 18 years, measures include the EDE-Q (or, for avoidant restrictive food intake disorder, the NIAS), the PHQ-2, the PHQ-9, the GAD-2, the GAD-7, the Clinical Impairment Assessment, and the 12-item WHO Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0. These questionnaires should be supplemented by information on patient characteristics and circumstances (ie, demographic, historical, and clinical factors). International adoption of these guidelines will allow comparison of research and clinical interventions to determine which settings and interventions work best, and for whom.
通过协调和广泛的结果测量,可以提高心理健康护理的效果。国际健康结果测量联合会已经为各种心理健康状况制定了协作的结果测量集,但对于饮食失调症却没有通用的指导方针。本立场文件提出了一套由来自专业和生活经验背景的 24 名国际专家确定的饮食失调症结果和测量方法。采用了改良的德尔菲技术,通过公开审查调查评估结果。最终建议指出,应在四个领域跟踪结果:饮食失调行为和认知、身体健康、并发心理健康状况以及生活质量和社会功能。使用三到五个患者报告的测量方法来收集结果。对于 6 岁至 12 岁的儿童,测量方法包括儿童饮食态度测试(或对于有回避性限制性食物摄入障碍的儿童,使用饮食失调症在青少年问卷)、KIDSCREEN-10 和修订后的儿童焦虑和抑郁筛查器-25。对于 13 岁至 17 岁的青少年,测量方法包括饮食失调检查问卷(EDE-Q;或对于回避性限制性食物摄入障碍,使用九项回避性限制性食物摄入障碍筛查器 [NIAS])、两项患者健康问卷(PHQ-2)、九项患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)、两项广泛性焦虑症(GAD-2)、七项广泛性焦虑症(GAD-7)和 KIDSCREEN-10。对于 18 岁以上的成年人,测量方法包括 EDE-Q(或对于回避性限制性食物摄入障碍,使用 NIAS)、PHQ-2、PHQ-9、GAD-2、GAD-7、临床损伤评估和 12 项世界卫生组织残疾评估表 2.0。这些问卷应辅以患者特征和情况(即人口统计学、历史和临床因素)的信息。这些指南的国际采用将允许比较研究和临床干预措施,以确定哪些环境和干预措施效果最好,以及对哪些人效果最好。