| Literature DB >> 28122609 |
Liv Marit Valen Schougaard1, Caroline Trillingsgaard Mejdahl2,3, Klaus Hvam Petersen4, Anne Jessen4, Annette de Thurah2,5,6, Per Sidenius7, Kirsten Lomborg2,6,3, Niels Henrik Hjollund4,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The traditional system of routine outpatient follow-up of chronic disease in secondary care may involve a waste of resources if patients are well. The use of patient-reported outcomes (PRO) could support more flexible, cost-saving follow-up activities. AmbuFlex is a PRO system used in outpatient follow-up in the Central Denmark Region. PRO questionnaires are sent to patients at fixed intervals. The clinicians use the PRO data to decide whether a patient needs a visit or not (standard telePRO). PRO may make patients become more involved in their own care pathway, which may improve their self-management. Better self-management may also be achieved by letting patients initiate contact. The aim of this study is to obtain data on the effects of patient-initiated follow-up (open access telePRO) on resource utilisation, quality of care, and the patient perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical practice; Open access; Outpatient clinic; Outpatient follow-up; Patient-reported outcomes; Randomised controlled trial; TelePRO
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28122609 PMCID: PMC5267418 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2015-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Screen capture of the clinicians’ overview in epilepsy clinics accessed from the Electronic Health Record of Central Denmark Region [13]. The colour dots in the upper row indicate the result of the automated PRO algorithm (red: definite need of contact, yellow: possible need of contact, green: no need of contact). Note that the colours of the bars have different meanings. The bars indicate the severity of the symptoms reported by the patient. A red or orange bar indicates a self-reported problem, a yellow bar some problem, and a green bar indicates no problems. Note: Labels were translated from Danish
Fig. 2The open access telePRO website “My Epilepsy”. Note: Labels were translated from Danish
Fig. 3PRO response overview customised to outpatients with epilepsy. A red or orange bar indicates a self reported problem, a yellow bar some problem, and green bar indicates no problems. Note: Labels were translated from Danish
Primary and secondary outcomes, data sources, and timeline for measurements
| Outcomes | Data sources | Measurement/month |
|---|---|---|
| Resource utilisation | ||
| 1. Number of contacts | The Hospital Business Intelligence Register, Central Denmark Region | 0–18 |
| Quality of care | ||
| 2. Well-being | WHO-Five Well-being Index (WHO-5) | 0, 18 |
| 3. General health | Item from The Short Form Health Survey (SF-36) | 0, 18 |
| 4. Mortality | The Hospital Business Intelligence Register, Central Denmark Region | 0–18 |
| 5. Number of seizures | Item from the epilepsy questionnaire, Central Denmark Region | 0, 18 |
| 6. Treatment side effects | Item from the epilepsy questionnaire, Central Denmark Region | 0, 18 |
| Patient perspective a | ||
| 7. Health literacy | The Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) sub scale 4, 6 and 9 | 0, 18 |
| 8. Self-efficacy | General Self-Efficacy scale (GSE) | 0, 18 |
| 9. Patient activation | Items from Patient Activation Measure (PAM) | 0, 18 |
| 10. Confidence, safety, and satisfaction | Items from a PREM questionnaire, Danish Cancer Society | 0, 18 |
a The patient perspective is primarily explored by qualitative methods in a complementary PhD study
Fig. 4Flowchart following patients from inclusion to final data collection