Abstract
BackgroundThe integration of Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) into clinical care presents many challenges for health systems. PROMs provide quantitative data regarding patient-reported health status. However, the most effective model for collecting PROMs has not been established. Therefore the purpose of this study is to report the development and preliminary evaluation of the standardized collection of PROMs within a department of orthopedic surgery at a large academic health center.MethodsWe utilized the Users’ Guide to Integrating Patient-Reported Outcomes in Electronic Health Records by Gensheimer et al., 2018 as a framework to describe the development of PROMs collection initiative. We framed our initiative by operationalizing the three aspects of PROM collection development: Planning, Selection, and Engagement. Next, we performed a preliminary evaluation of our initiative by assessing the response rate of patients completing PROMs (no. of PROMs completed/no. of PROMs administered) across the entire department (18 clinics), ambulatory clinics only (14 clinics), and hospital-based clinics only (4 clinics). Lastly, we reported on the mean response rates for the top 5 and bottom 5 orthopaedic providers to describe the variability across providers.ResultsWe described the development of a fully-integrated, population health based implementation strategy leveraging the existing resources of our local EHR to maximize clinical utility of PROMs and routine collection. We collected a large volume of PROMs over a 13 month period (n = 10,951) across 18 clinical sites, 7 clinical specialties and over 100 providers. The response rates varied across the department, ranging from 29 to 42%, depending on active status for the portal to the electronic health record (MyChart). The highest single provider mean response rate was 52%, and the lowest provider rate was 13%. Rates were similar between hospital-based (26%) and ambulatory clinics (29%).ConclusionsWe found that our standardized PROMs collection initiative, informed by Gensheimer et al., achieved scope and scale, but faced challenges in achieving a high response rate commensurate with existing literature. However, most studies reported a targeted recruitment strategy within a narrow clinical population. Further research is needed to elucidate the trade-off between scalability and response rates in PROM collection initiatives.
Highlights
The integration of Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) into clinical care presents many challenges for health systems
We reported the total number of PROMs completed and mean response rates at baseline across the entire department (18 clinics), ambulatory clinics only (14 clinics), and hospital-based clinics only (4 clinics)
The identified advantages to the third-party approach were the access to data for clinicians and researchers outside the electronic health record (EHR), benchmarking with other orthopedic departments and providers, ability to enroll patients in registries, and wide availability of orthopedic-specific outcome measures
Summary
The integration of Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) into clinical care presents many challenges for health systems. PROMs provide quantitative data regarding patient-reported health status. It is vital for health systems to integrate PROMs collection into routine clinical care to improve patient care, engage in shared decision-making, and complete meaningful patient-centered research [6]. The integration of PROMs into clinical care presents many challenges for health systems [8], and widespread implementation of routine collection has been limited due to clinician, staff, and patient reluctance, inadequate resources to deal with positive or unexpected results, concerns about how the data will be used, and workflow and technology challenges [9]. Effective patient-centered care requires the routine integration of PROMs [10], and integration of PROMs into the electronic health record (EHR) is fundamental to advancing clinical care by providing quantitative data regarding patient reported patient health status [11]
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