Tracy Lincoln M, Capell Elizabeth, Cleland Heather J, Edgar Dale W, Singer Yvonne, Teague Warwick J, Gabbe Belinda J
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Australia.
School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Australia; Victorian Adult Burns Service, The Alfred, Australia.
Burns. 2025 Feb;51(1):107304. doi: 10.1016/j.burns.2024.107304. Epub 2024 Oct 28.
Collecting patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) has been a longstanding priority for the Burns Registry of Australia and New Zealand (BRANZ). An earlier pilot of hospital-led PROM collection encountered low participation rates and high loss to follow-up, indicating consideration for an alternative model was warranted.
To establish the feasibility of implementing centralised long-term PROM collection within the BRANZ.
Two burn services participated in this prospective, longitudinal pilot. PROMs were collected from patients admitted to the services between January and December 2021 who survived to discharge. Follow-up occurred via telephone or online self-completion at three, six, and 12 months post-injury using burn-specific and generic health-related quality-of-life measures.
There were 450 patients (423 adult patients [≥ 16 years] and 27 paediatric patients [< 16 years]) who could be contacted and agreed to participate in the follow-ups. Most patients initially opted for telephone rather than online self-completion (n = 305, 67.5 %). No key sociodemographic or injury event factors were associated with specifically opting for online self-completion. The follow-up rates were 81.1 % at three months, 81.9 % at six months, and 77.3 % at 12 months. Data missingness was low (i.e., < 2 %) for all instrument items, excluding the visual analogue scale scores of the 5-Level EuroQoL 5 Dimensions Questionnaire and the two paediatric burn-specific measures.
Collecting PROMs from burns patients in the first 12 months after injury via a centralised approach was shown to be feasible, with higher participation rates and low missingness.
收集患者报告的结局指标(PROMs)一直是澳大利亚和新西兰烧伤登记处(BRANZ)的一项长期优先事项。早期由医院主导的PROM收集试点遭遇了低参与率和高失访率,这表明有必要考虑采用另一种模式。
确定在BRANZ内实施集中式长期PROM收集的可行性。
两家烧伤服务机构参与了这项前瞻性纵向试点。从2021年1月至12月入院且存活至出院的患者中收集PROMs。在受伤后3个月、6个月和12个月通过电话或在线自我填写方式进行随访,采用烧伤特异性和一般健康相关生活质量测量方法。
有450名患者(423名成年患者[≥16岁]和27名儿科患者[<16岁])能够被联系上并同意参与随访。大多数患者最初选择电话随访而非在线自我填写(n = 305,67.5%)。没有关键的社会人口统计学或损伤事件因素与特别选择在线自我填写相关。3个月时的随访率为81.1%,6个月时为81.9%,12个月时为77.3%。所有量表项目的数据缺失率较低(即<2%),5维度欧洲生活质量量表(EuroQoL 5 Dimensions Questionnaire)的视觉模拟量表得分以及两项儿科烧伤特异性测量除外。
通过集中式方法在烧伤患者受伤后的前12个月收集PROMs被证明是可行的,参与率较高且缺失率较低。