Abstract

Introduction: Integration of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in routine clinical care is growing but lacks consolidated evidence around its impact on pediatric care. This systematic review aims to evaluate the impact of integrating PROMs in routine pediatric clinical care on various outcomes in pediatric clinical care.Data Sources: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Cochrane Library. Web of Science database was searched selectively to ensure extended coverage.Study Selection: We included longitudinal studies reporting on the integration of PROMs in routine pediatric clinical care of chronic diseases. Studies in languages other than English, published prior to the year 2000, and reporting on secondary data were excluded.Data Extraction: Two reviewers independently extracted data from included studies. Extracted data included citation of each study, type of healthcare setting, location of the study, characteristics of patient population, type of chronic disease, name and type of PROM, mode of administration, and reported outcomes.Results: Out of 6,869 articles, titles and abstracts of 5,416 articles and full text of 23 articles were screened in duplicate. Seven articles reporting results from six studies met eligibility criteria. Integration of PROMs increased the identification and discussion around health-related quality of life (HRQOL), especially in psychosocial and emotional domains, but showed mixed results with the impact on quality of care. No studies assessed the impact of integrating PROMs on healthcare utilization.Limitations: Due to significant heterogeneity in the studies, a meta-analysis was not conducted.Conclusions: Integrating PROMs could have a positive impact on HRQOL; however, further studies are required to determine the impact of PROMs in routine pediatric clinical care.

Highlights

  • Integration of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in routine clinical care is growing but lacks consolidated evidence around its impact on pediatric care

  • No studies assessed the impact of integrating PROMs on healthcare utilization

  • Integrating PROMs could have a positive impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL); further studies are required to determine the impact of PROMs in routine pediatric clinical care

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Summary

Introduction

Integration of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in routine clinical care is growing but lacks consolidated evidence around its impact on pediatric care. Study Selection: We included longitudinal studies reporting on the integration of PROMs in routine pediatric clinical care of chronic diseases. Patient–clinician interaction is essential to optimize chronic disease management; integration of patientreported outcome measures (PROMs) in routine clinical care is touted as an effective way to steer healthcare toward a PCC model and provide integrated care [6, 7]. PROMs are self-completed questionnaires that have been standardized and validated and assess the following health domains: physical, emotional, social, functional, overall well-being, and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) [8, 9]. HRQOL can be defined as “how well a person functions in their life and his or her perceived well-being in physical, mental, and social domains of health” [10]

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