Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction For many years, psychologists and other social scientists have been pushing for the individual patient’s perspective – priorities, needs, feelings, and functioning – to be incorporated into drug development. This is usually achieved through the use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in clinical trials. Areas covered This paper discusses some key issues in the use of PROM data as the sole method of generating information about the patient’s perspective and outlines the relevance of narrative evidence to enhance understanding and interpretation of PROM data. Expert opinion The development and use of PROMs situates them at the vertex of two very different trends in medicine: patient-centered care and standardization. Indeed, the application of PROMs – which pull in the direction of standardization – results in a narrow conception of evidence by overriding the subjectivity of individual experiences, beliefs, and judgments. Without additional context, PROM data cannot easily support individual patient-level care. When collected systematically and with an interpretive phenomenological approach, narrative data can contain valuable information about the patient experience that numerical ratings from PRO measures do not capture.

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