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Showing results for tags 'PROMs'.
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News Article
Dr Penny Kechagioglou on digitising patient reported outcome measures
Clive Flashman posted a news article in News
Dr Penny Kechagioglou, Chief Clinical Information Officer and Deputy Chief Medical Officer at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire, kindly shared her thoughts on digitising patient reported outcome measures in a blog for HTN. The UK digital transformation wave is mainly characterised by the roll-out of electronic health records and is an opportunity to transform patient care by collecting and analysing patient reported outcome measures digitally. A recent study at the European Society of Medical Oncology open journal (Modi, 2022) showed that patient reported outcome measures are predictive of cancer patient treatment response and quality of life for physical and mental parameters. The knowledge of patient reported outcomes (PRO) and experience (PRE) measures can be valuable in the monitoring of individual patient symptoms in clinic or remotely in the community and also for aggregating and interpreting population health data. To read the full article, click here- Posted
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Content ArticleThis article* is an update from Dr Henrietta Hughes, Patient Safety Commissioner for England.
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Content ArticlePatient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are increasingly used in health care. To capture the patient’s perspective, patient involvement in PROM development is needed. This study, published in BMC Health Services Research, aimed to investigate why PROM developers do or do not involve patients, how patients can be successfully involved and what the negative aspects and benefits of patient involvement are.
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Content ArticleIn this paper, published in Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes, authors report the findings of a realist synthesis that aimed to understand how and in what circumstances patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) support patient-clinician communication and subsequent care processes and outcomes in clinical care. They tested two overarching programme theories: PROMs completion prompts a process of self-reflection and supports patients to raise issues with clinicians. PROMs scores raise clinicians’ awareness of patients’ problems and prompts discussion and action. They examined how the structure of the PROM and care context shaped the ways in which PROMs support clinician-patient communication and subsequent care processes.
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Content ArticlePatient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) are widely used in the United Kingdom (UK) and internationally to report and monitor patients’ subjective assessments of their symptoms and functional status and also their quality of life. Whilst the importance of involving the public in PROM development to increase the quality of the developed PROM has been highlighted this practice is not widespread. There is a lack of guidance on how public involvement (PI) could be embedded in the development of PROMs, where the roles can be more complex than in other types of research. This paper, published in Journal of Patient-Reported Outcomes, provides a review and sets out an emerging framework for fully incorporating PI into PROM development.
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Content ArticlePatient‐reported outcome measures (PROMs) are questionnaires that collect health outcomes directly from the people who experience them. This review, published in Health Expectations, critically synthesises information on generic and selected condition‐specific PROMs to describe trends and contemporary issues regarding their development, validation and application.
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Content ArticleThis research-based guide has been co-developed by Healthcare Improvement Scotland, the University of Dundee and the University of Glasgow to provide an overview of PROMs. It also aims to prevent the exclusion of people with low literacy skills and/or learning disabilities from PROM administration.
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Content ArticleMedicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) presentation on their patient involvement strategy and how they are using Patient Reported Outcomes (PROs).
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- Patient engagement
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