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Introduction to Selfreporting Tools: Patient Outcomes Assessment

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Title: Introduction to Selfreporting Tools: Patient Outcomes Assessment


1
Introduction to Self-reporting ToolsPatient
Outcomes Assessment
2
  • Be delightfully surprised when any treatment at
    all is effective
  • Always assume a treatment is ineffective unless
    there is evidence to the contrary
  • Cochrane, 1971

3
Questions
  • Can we distinguish between positive and negative
    effects of treatment?
  • What is the magnitude of these effects?
  • Is there a net measure of effects that can be
    interpreted?
  • Is the treatment doing what we want it to?
  • improve function?

4
Outcomes
  • Outcomes Assessment
  • Collection and recording of information relative
    to health processes
  • Outcomes Management
  • Using information in a way that enhances patient
    care
  • (Hansen DT, Mior S, Mootz RD in Yeomans SG The
    Clinical Application of Outcomes Assessment,
    Stamford Connecticut, Appleton Lange, 2000)

5
The Era of Outcomes Assessment
  • Outcomes in clinical practice provide the
    mechanism by which the health care provider, the
    patient, the public, and the payer are able to
    assess the end results of care and its effect
    upon the health of the patient and society
  • (Anderson Weinstein, 1994)

6
Health Policy
  • With the dawning of the era of accountability,
    there are new social mandates directed toward
    health care providers and health-related
    facilities. Measurements of quality,
    satisfaction, efficacy and effectiveness now
    serve as essential elements for health care
    decisions and matters of health policy
  • (Hansen et al, 2000)

7
Patient Outcomes Assessment
Patient-reported outcomes
Clinician-reported outcomes
Caregiver-reported outcomes
HRQL Functional status Well-being, Satisfaction
with health, satisfaction with treatment
/symptoms, treatment adherence
E.G., Clinical impressions Signs Functional
status Number of events (e.g. giving way)
Caregiver burden Dependency Global impression
Biological and physiological outcomes
E.G.,B/P, FEV1 Tumor size, Survival
8
The Patients Perspective is ...
  • A unique indicator of the impact of
    disease/dysfunction
  • Essential for evaluating treatment efficacy
  • Useful for interpreting clinical outcomes
  • A key element in treatment decision-making

9
Outcomes Assessment
  • Assessment of effectiveness of treatment
  • best achieved by repeated application of
    standardized measurement in evaluations
  • Outcomes term to describe and quantify the
    consequences of health care interventions
  • Can be differentiated in terms of observer
    perspectivePT vs patient

10
Outcomes Assessment
  • Does linear relationship exists between
    impairments and broader patient-level outcomes?
  • More impairments are decreased, the more the
    disability will be reduced?
  • Ex pt with hip fracture PT intervention to
    increase strength of weak muscles will result an
    improvement in patient function

11
Outcomes Assessment
  • Relationship between impairments and disability
    is complex and affected by many factors
  • Individuals pyschologic response to injury
  • Attitudes of significant others in pts social
    network
  • Patients physical environment

12
Terminology
  • Health Status death, disease, disability,
    discomfort, dissatisfaction (5 Ds)
  • Functional Status performance of social roles
    and activities
  • Well-Being wellness, feelings
  • Quality of life safe environment, adequate
    housing, guaranteed income, respect, love,
    freedom, spirituality, meaning and purpose
  • Health-related quality of life those aspects of
    quality of life attributed to health
  • Patient-reported outcomes all of above plus
    adherence to treatment and patient satisfaction
    with health care

13
Health-Related Quality of Life
  • Represents the patients evaluation of the
    impact of a health condition and its treatment on
    relevant aspects of life
  • The evaluative component can be measured by
  • severity
  • bothersomeness
  • importance
  • satisfaction

14
Health-Related Quality of Life
  • Represents the patients evaluation of the
    impact of a health condition and its treatment on
    relevant aspects of life
  • The relevant aspects of life are measured as
    domains, including, but NOT only
  • physical
  • psychological
  • social

15
WHO Definition of Quality of Life
  • Individuals perceptions of their position in
    life in the context of the culture and value
    systems in which they live, and in relation to
    their goals, expectations, standards, and
    concerns
  • It is a broad ranging concept affected in a
    complex way by the persons physical health,
    psychological state, level of independence,
    social relationships, personal beliefs, and their
    relationship to salient features of the
    environment.

16
Determinants of Health and Quality of Life
Environment (Outside Individual)
Social Cultural
Economic Political
Physical Geographic
Health Social Care
General Quality of Life
Health-Related Quality of Life
Functional Status
Health Perceptions
Symptoms
Opportunity
Individual
Lifestyle Health Behavior
Biology Life Course
Personality Motivation
Values Preferences
Illness Behavior
17
Outcomes Criteria
  • Utility Is it useful?
  • Reliability Is it dependable?
  • Validity Does it do what it is supposed to?
  • Sensitivity Can it identify patients with a
    condition?
  • Specificity Can it identify those that do not
    have the condition?
  • Responsiveness Can it measure differences
    over time?

18
Outcome Measures Appropriate for Clinical Use
  • Questionnaires
  • General health status
  • Pain
  • Functional status
  • Patient satisfaction
  • Physiological outcomes
  • Utilization measures
  • Cost measures

19
Outcomes Measures Appropriately Used
  • When outcome measures are appropriately used and
    integrated
  • into an evidence-based, patient-centered model
    of practice, there is accountability and quality
    assurance
  • (Hansen DT, Mior S, Mootz RD in Yeomans SG The
    Clinical Application of Outcomes Assessment,
    Stamford Connecticut, Appleton Lange, 2000)

20
Subjective Questionnaires
  • Subjective outcomes assessment information is
    gathered by the patient in self-administered
    questionnaires and scored by
  • health care provider,
  • staff members
  • computer

21
Subjective Questionnaires
  • In spite of the definition associated with the
    term subjective, these pen-and-paper tools
    have been described as very valid and reliable
    in many cases more so than many of the
    objective tests that health care providers have
    relied upon for years
  • (Chapman-Smith, 1992 Hansen, 1994 Mootz, 1994)

22
Classifying Patient Reported Measures of Function
  • Generic measures of health status
  • Applicable across a number of disease processes
    and across demographic and cultural subgroups
  • Specific measures of health status
  • Designed to focus on aspects of health that are
    specific to the primary condition of interest
  • ie body part, condition

23
Advantages of Generic and Specific Measures
  • Generic
  • comprehensiveness
  • comparison across interventions and conditions
  • established psychometric properties
  • Specific
  • tailored to disease, body region, condition,
    population
  • may be more acceptable to respondents
  • may be more responsive

24
Disadvantages of Generic and Specific Measures
  • Generic
  • may not be responsive enough
  • may not have focus of interest
  • some are lengthy
  • Specific
  • comparisons across conditions and interventions
    may not be possible
  • may miss unanticipated effects

25
General Health Questionnaires (GHQ)
  • One can benefit from the use of a GHQ because it
    is not condition-specific and, therefore, can be
    applied to virtually any complaint
  • Yeomans SG The Clinical Applications of
    Outcomes Assessment, 2000

26
Application Intervals of General Health
Questionnaires
  • Initial eval for baseline establishment of
    outcomes and to identify problems for prompt
    management
  • At a plateau in care or discharge for outcomes
    assessment of treatment benefits ( or lack
    thereof)
  • Six months after discharge in order to evaluate
    long-term benefits of treatment
  • (research)

27
SF 36 General Health Questionnaire
  • Designed for self administration, telephone
    administration or administration during personal
    interview
  • Measures 8 health concepts
  • Physical functioning
  • Role limitations because of physical health
    problems
  • Bodily pain
  • Social functioning
  • General mental health
  • Role limitations because of emotional problems
  • Vitality
  • General health perceptions

28
SF 36 General Health Questionnaire
  • This can serve as a very practical reference tool
    to use for patient report of findings, to
    insurers to justify medical necessity for
    additional care, and to the health care provider
    to facilitate the decision making process of case
    management (referral, discharge)

29
SF-36
  • Some of the scales such as physical functioning
    and bodily pain are sensitive to change over time
    and parallel the patients symptoms well

30
Generic Pain Questionnaire
  • Visual Analogue Scales
  • Reliable and valid (Jensen and Karoly, 1993)
  • Advantages over other measurement methods (Scott
    and Huskisson 1976, Price et al 1994)

31
Generic Pain Questionnaires
  • Quadruple Visual Analogue Scale
  • Four specific factors
  • Current pain level
  • Average or typical pain level
  • Pain level at its best
  • Pain level at its worst

32
Generic Pain Questionairres
  • Quadruple Visual Analogue Scale
  • Frequency
  • Every 2 weeks since a patients failure to
    progress over a 2-week period may indicate a need
    for a change in management approaches
  • (Haldeman et al, 1993)

33
Specific Measures of Health Status
  • Region specific
  • LB, Knee, Hip, Foot/Ankle, Arm/Shoulder/Hand
  • Condition specific
  • CTS, TMJ, HA
  • Disease specific
  • Arthritis

34
Condition-specific
  • Over 40 low back functional questionnaires exist
    with five identified by researchers as gold
    standards (Kopec and Esdaile, 1995)
  • Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire
    (Fairbank et al, 1980)
  • Sickness Impact Profile
  • Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire
  • Million Visual Analogue Scale
  • Waddell Disability Index

35
Oswestry - Score Interpretation
  • To score rated 0-5 add up/out of 50
  • 0-20 Minimal Disability
  • 20-40 Moderate Disability
  • 40-60 Severe Disability
  • 60-80 Crippled
  • 80-100 Bed Bound or Exaggerating

  • Fairbanks et al, 1980

36
Modified Oswestry
  • Retitled section 8, now identified as Social
    Life
  • This section was originally entitled sex life
    and was left blank quite often by respondents
  • In the revised version, all ten sections are
    completed more often than in the original version
  • Hudson-Cook N, Tomes-Nicholson K, Breen AC. A
    Revised Oswestry Back Disability Questionnaire.
    Manchester Univ Press, 1989

37
Oswestry Questionnaire
  • A score of 11 may be used as an appropriate
    cut-off score for health care providers to
    consider for discharge and/or return to work in
    an uncomplicated Low Back Pain case (Erhard et al
    1994)

38
  • Minimum Clinically Important Difference MCID
    amount of change that best distinguishes between
    patients who have improved and those remaining
    stable
  • OSW 6 pts

39
Neck Disability Inventory (NDI)
  • Was designed by modifying the Oswestry Low Back
    Pain Disability Questionnaire
  • Score like Oswestry disability calculated
  • Vernon Mior, 1991

40
KOS (Knee Outcome Survey)
  • Results suggest that the (KOS) is a reliable,
    valid and responsive instrument for the
    assessment of functional limitations that result
    from a wide variety of pathological disorders and
    impairments of the knee
  • Synder-Mackler et al, JBJS 1998
  • Rated 5-0 with 0 being unable ADL score/70
    sport score/55
  • Global Rating Scale (GRS) included

41
Outcome-Based Practice
  • Correlating this information to the patients
    specific clinical data and then making a clinical
    decision based on the results represents a
    difficult but important step in making the
    paradigm shift into becoming an outcome-based
    practice
  • Yeomans SG The Clinical Application of Outcomes
    Assessment, Stamford Connecticut, Appleton
    Lange, 2000

42
4 Steps to Become Outcomes Based
  • Utilize subjective/objective tools
  • Score the tools at the initial visit to establish
    baseline measures ( helps with goal setting!)
  • Repeat the instrument after 2-4 week intervals
    and at discharge to track the effects of
    treatment
  • Base clinical decisions on the outcome results

43
Medical Necessity
  • The fully developed clinical record (chart)
    defines the medical necessity of the case in
    the eyes of the insurer

44
Medical Necessity Documentation
  • Provider must document
  • Etiology of complaint
  • (onset, severity, frequency , duration)
  • Patients health history
  • Current subjective complaints
  • Current objective clinical findings
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment plan
  • Measurements of patient improvement (outcome
    assessment)
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