| Literature DB >> 21126374 |
Steven McPhail1, Elaine Beller, Terry Haines.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical practice and clinical research has made a concerted effort to move beyond the use of clinical indicators alone and embrace patient focused care through the use of patient reported outcomes such as health-related quality of life. However, unless patients give consistent consideration to the health states that give meaning to measurement scales used to evaluate these constructs, longitudinal comparison of these measures may be invalid. This study aimed to investigate whether patients give consideration to a standard health state rating scale (EQ-VAS) and whether consideration of good and poor health state descriptors immediately changes their self-report.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21126374 PMCID: PMC3014890 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7525-8-146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Figure 1Study design - Randomised Crossover Trial.
Participant Demographics, baseline EQ-VAS and Functional Independence Measure scores
| Group 1 | Group 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Age - median (IQR) | 80 (74-86) | 79 (73-86) |
| Mini Mental State Examination - median (IQR) | 27 (25-29) | 26 (25-29) |
| Diagnosis category | ||
| Stroke | 7 (9%) | 9 (12%) |
| Other Neurological | 2 (3%) | 3 (4%) |
| Orthopedic (non elective) | 23 (30%) | 20 (27%) |
| Orthopedic (elective) | 1 (1%) | 2 (3%) |
| Other Musculo-skeletal | 2 (3%) | 2 (3%) |
| Cardiac | 3 (4%) | 3 (4%) |
| Pulmonary | 8 (10%) | 5 (7%) |
| lower limb amputation | 17 (22%) | 16 (22%) |
| Other Medical Condition | 8 (10%) | 8 (11%) |
| Other Geriatric Condition | 7 (9%) | 6 (8%) |
| Functional Independence Measure | ||
| Cognition - median (IQR) | 33 (31-34) | 32 (30-33) |
| Motor - median (IQR) | 61 (44-68) | 59 (47-70) |
| Baseline EQ-VAS - mean (SD) | 59 (19) | 56 (16) |
Number of participants who increased or decreased their EQ-VAS self report by 5 points or more after exposure to either good or poor health state descriptors as well as after both sets of descriptors.
| Group 1 n = 77 | Group 2 n = 74 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number (%) Increase ≥5 points | Number (%) Decrease ≥5 points | Number (%) Either direction ≥5points | Number (%) Increase ≥5 points | Number (%) Decrease ≥5 points | Number (%) Either direction ≥5points | |
| Good health descriptors (Description-A) | 29 (38%) | 24 (31%) | 53 (69%) | 11 (15%) | 25 (34%) | 36 (49%) |
| Poor health descriptors (Description-B) | 37 (48%) | 14 (18%) | 51 (66%) | 45 (61%) | 8 (11%) | 53 (72%) |
| After both Description A and B (compared with baseline EQ-VAS) | 39 (51%) | 12 (16%) | 51 (66%) | 40 (54%) | 15 (20%) | 55 (74%) |
Figure 2Mean difference (and standard error) from baseline at each assessment by group.