Abstract

BackgroundPromoting the collection and use of health related outcome measures (HROM) in daily practice has long been a goal for improving and assessing the effectiveness of care provided to patients. However, there has been a lack of consensus on what criteria to use to select outcomes or instruments, particularly in the context of primary health care settings where patients present with multiple concurrent health conditions and interventions are whole-health and person-focused. The purpose of this proposed study is to undertake a formal consensus exercise to establish criteria for selecting HROM (including patient-reported (PRO or PROM), observer-reported (ObsR)), clinician-reported (ClinRO) and performance related outcomes (PerfO) for use in shared decision-making, or in assessing, screening or monitoring health status in primary health care settings.MethodsA Delphi consensus online survey will be developed. Criteria for the Delphi panel participants to consider were selected from a targeted literature search. These initial criteria (n = 35) were grouped into four categories within which items will be presented in the Delphi survey, with the option to suggest additional items. Panel members invited to participate will include primary health care practitioners and administrators, policy-makers, researchers, and experts in HROM development; patients will be excluded. Standard Delphi methodology will be employed with an expectation of at least 3 rounds to achieve consensus (75% agreement). As the final list of criteria for selecting HROM emerges, panel members will be asked to provide opinions about potential weighting of items. The Delphi survey was approved by the Ethics Committee in the Faculty of Health Sciences at McMaster University.DiscussionPrevious literature establishing criteria for selecting HROM were developed with a focus on patient reported outcomes, psychological/ behavioural outcomes or outcomes for minimum core outcome sets in clinical trials. Although helpful, these criteria may not be applicable and feasible for application in a primary health care context where patients with multi-morbidity and complex interventions are typical and the constraints of providing health services differ from those in research studies. The findings from this Delphi consensus study will address a gap for establishing consensus on criteria for selecting HROM for use across primary health care settings.

Highlights

  • Promoting the collection and use of health related outcome measures (HROM) in daily practice has long been a goal for improving and assessing the effectiveness of care provided to patients

  • Routine collection of health related outcomes can occur in more formal contexts, for example in developing patient or disease registries, or less formal where findings are documented in individual patient charts

  • We provide background information around definitions and use of HROM, previous attempts to establish criteria to select measures, hypothesized benefits and use of HROM in clinical settings, the relevance to the primary health care (PHC) context and evaluation of complex interventions generally

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Summary

Introduction

Promoting the collection and use of health related outcome measures (HROM) in daily practice has long been a goal for improving and assessing the effectiveness of care provided to patients. Some focus predominately on patient reported [1] or psychological/ behavioural outcomes [2, 3]; there are many other types of measures used to assess the impact of care Another attempt was developed in the context of comparing clinical trials and using an agreed upon set of common outcomes [4]. Another is to be considered broadly at a systems level and not readily operationalized with consistency [5, 6]. These previous criteria recommended to select outcomes may not be applicable for all types of outcomes or in other contexts in which they were developed

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