| Literature DB >> 28830441 |
Bridget Johnston1, Kate Flemming2, Melanie Jay Narayanasamy3, Carolyn Coole3, Beth Hardy2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient reported outcome measures are frequently used standard questionnaires or tools designed to collect information from patients regarding their health status and care. Their use enables accurate and relevant insight into changes in health, quality of life, and symptom severity to be acquired. The purpose of this scoping review was to identify PROMs that had been subject to rigorous development and were suitable for use in palliative and end of life care for clinical practice and/or research purposes. The review had a specific focus on measures which could be used to assess perceptions of dignity in these contexts.Entities:
Keywords: Dignity; End of life care; Palliative care; Patient reported outcome measures; Scoping review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28830441 PMCID: PMC5567432 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2450-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Recommendations for PROMs from key projects
| Project | Summary | Key recommendations |
|---|---|---|
| Methods of Researching End of life Care (MORECare)- Higginson et al. (2013) | Dedicated to producing evidence-based guidance on methods to help in the design and conduct of research in end of life care. | Outcome me:asures should be: |
| Reflecting the Positive DiveRsities of European Priorities for ReSearch and Measurement in End-of-Life Care- Bausewein et al. (2011) | PRISMA focuses on bringing about best practice and supporting research and outcome measurement in end of life care across Europe. | Outcome measures should be: |
| Outcome Assessment and Complexity Collaborative (OACC) Suite of Measures- Murtagh et al. (2014) | Working to monitor the implementation of outcome measures into routine clinical practice. | Outcome measures should be: |
Critical appraisal tool
| Screening question | Responses and key prompt questions to help make the decision |
|---|---|
| 1. FORMAT | o Yes [] |
| Is the measure administratively manageable? | o Yes [] |
| Is the measure short? | o Yes [] |
| 2. DATA COLLECTION TIME POINTS | o Yes [] |
| 3. VALIDITY TESTING | o Yes* [] |
| 4 RELIABILITY TESTING | o Yes* [] |
| 5 CLINICAL RESPONSIVENESS | o Yes [] |
| 6 ACCEPTABILITY AND APPLICABILITY | o Yes [] |
| Is the measure applicable to the clinical setting? | o Yes [] |
| 7. TRANSLATION | Has the measure been sufficiently translated? |
Inclusion criteria
| Review inclusion criteria | Clarification/Justification |
|---|---|
| 1. Papers must: | o Interested in papers that that describe the development and testing of outcome measures that have been through reliability and validity testing or are systematic reviews of existing measures |
| 2. Outcome measure must be relevant to any patient experiencing an illness or condition for which they are receiving palliative or end of life care | o |
| 3. Target patient population must include people receiving palliative and/or end of life care/care of the dying | o See definition of |
| 4. Papers must include indication that one or more relevant palliative and/or end of life domains (physical, psychological, social and spiritual) have been measured | Based on World Health Organisation definition |
| 5. Papers must be written in English-language | We do not have the resources or time to translate measures |
| 6. Papers must have been published between 2005 and 2015 | We are interested in papers published within the last 10 years, since early scoping identified that this period was more likely to produce relevant papers/ discussion of key patient reported outcome measures |
| 7. Papers must be focused on populations over 18 years of age | We are not looking for measures that re chid or adolescent specific |
Fig. 1The stages of narrowing down texts (Prisma diagram)
MEDLINE search strategy
| Search term | Number of hits | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | personhood/ | 3271 |
| 2. | humanism/ | 2998 |
| 3. | self concept/ | 47,018 |
| 4. | (dignity or dignified). ti,ab. | 5091 |
| 5. | (personhood o person-hood). ti, ab. | 791 |
| 6. | (self-worth or self-concept or self-esteem). ti, ab. | 18,619 |
| 7. | patient-centred care/ | 12,034 |
| 8. | (person adj (centred or centered or focused)).ti, ab. | 1781 |
| 9. | (patient adj (centred or centered or focused)).ti. ab | 11,059 |
| 10. | (client adj (centred or centered or focused)).ti, ab. | 1108 |
| 11. | (user adj (centred or centered or focused)).ti, ab. | 526 |
| 12. | ((whole person or holistic) adj2 (need$ or care or caring)).ti, ab. | 1781 |
| 13. | or/1–12 (88873) | 88,873 |
| 14. | Terminal Care/ | 22,110 |
| 15. | Hospice Care/ | 4852 |
| 16. | Palliative Care/ | 42,211 |
| 17. | “Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing”/ | 131 |
| 18. | Hospices/ | 4440 |
| 19. | Palliative Medicine/ | 35 |
| 20. | Terminally Ill/ | 5562 |
| 21. | end of life.ti,ab. | 13,365 |
| 22. | (end-stage$ or endstage$).ti, ab. | 48,621 |
| 23. | (life threatening or life limiting).ti, ab. | 59,165 |
| 24. | ((final or last) adj3 days).ti, ab. | 10,417 |
| 25. | (terminal$ adj3 (ill$ or stage$ or phase or prognosis or disease$ or cancer$)).ti, ab. | 14,027 |
| 26. | (terminal$ adj3 (care or caring or therap$ or treatment$ or intervention$)).ti, ab. | 3908 |
| 27. | (terminal$ adj2 patient$).ti, ab | 5078 |
| 28. | palliat$.ti, ab. | 52,801 |
| 29. | hospice$.ti, ab. | 8971 |
| 30. | dying.ti, ab. | 26,751 |
| 31. | or/14–30 | 241,674 |
| 32. | 13 and 31 | 3374 |
| 33. | (death adj2 (dignity or dignified)).ti, ab. | 596 |
| 34. | 32 or 33 | 3585 |
Numbers of articles retrieved from databases
| Database | Results | After deduplication |
|---|---|---|
| MEDLINE & MEDLINE In-Process | 3146 | 3065 |
| EMBASE | 4530 | 2073 |
| PsycInfo | 1832 | 1167 |
| CINAHL | 3081 | 939 |
| Social Science Citation Index | 1382 | 476 |
| ASSIA | 440 | 88 |
| Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) | 101 | 11 |
| Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) | 4 | 3 |
| Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) | 25 | 11 |
| Health Technology Assessment Database (HTA) | 4 | 4 |
| Oxford PROM Bibliography | 21 | 4 |
| PROQOLID | 4 | 4 |
| Total | 14,570 | 7845 |
Fig. 2PRISMA flow diagram
measures included in final review
| Measure | Key attributes | Strengths | Weaknesses | Critical appraisal SCORE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Innovative; based on its unique foci on the key characteristics of the specialist nurse working in palliative care. This has not been an area attended to by other existing PROMs. | A strength of this measure is that it does accommodate some free text input from participants, which means that a larger level of detail can be collected | Only reports on face and content validity which partly accounted for it being the lowest-scoring measure based on our tool’s critical appraisal at Further testing around other validity aspects, such as criterion and construct are needed. In addition, reliability testing was also absent. | 53.3% (8 out of 15). |
| 2. Patient Dignity Inventory (PDI) | This is a 25-item tool, which is designed to assess dignity-related distress amongst people with end of life care needs. The PDI items were developed from the themes and subthemes encapsulated within Chochinov and colleagues’ Dignity Mode | The authors highlight that the PDI demonstrates strong face validity, and is adaptable to a range of care settings, such as community based locations as well as palliative care hospital units | The limitations addressed by the authors include the fact that the PDI should be robustly researched amongst younger patient populations and those with non-cancer conditions, since this current study consisted of largely older people with cancer illnesses. | 93.3%/ (14 out of 15) |
|
| The QOC instrument measures patients’ perspectives regarding satisfaction with health professionals communication (there are separate questionnaires for physicians and nurses) during end of life care. It was originally a four –item questionnaire [ | One of only measures to specifically measure health care communication | Family reported data did not attain statistical significance as part of cross-respondent validation | 66.7% (10 out of 15) |
|
| This is an instrument dedicated to measuring attributed dignity amongst older adults in the community. The authors suggest that attributed dignity is a form of dignity, which involves ideas around self-value and perceived value from others. This concept of dignity was developed by Jacelon [ | Is a short measure using a consistent positive scoring approach, with higher scores equating to perceived greater attributed dignity | Further testing is required to establish whether the modified response format is feasible. In addition psychometric testing falls short of exploring inter-rater reliability, content validity, and criterion validity. Inability at this stage to be used clinically beyond research studies. | 60.0% (9 out of 15) |
|
| The MIDAM-LTC is an instrument which assesses the extent to which aspects of a person’s life influences their sense of personal dignity | MIDAM-LTC enables dignity to be assessed more appropriately in long-term care settings, and for offering guidance to improve the dignity-conserving practice of caregivers. Modifying the measure to a 31 item tool was perceived by authors to improve feasibility whilst retaining comprehensiveness | Some key aspects of reliability testing were missing including internal consistency and inter-rater reliability | 73.3% (11 out of 15). |
|
| Clinical tool that enables needs assessment in palliative care. | Holistic tool covering a variety of domains. | There are gaps in the reliability testing administered, including test-retest reliability and inter-related reliability. | 70.6% (12 out of 17). |
|
| A tool aimed at assessing the quality of life of people with palliative and end of life needs. The tool was originally developed by Byock and Merriman [ | The tool enabled opportunities to arise to discuss psychosocial and spiritual issues, which may not otherwise voluntarily emerge. The tool also enabled holistic, collaborative, person-centred care to materialise. | Improvements were also identified, including that organisational infrastructure support is required to ensure that the MVQOLI-R is used effectively, and that confidence would only improve with repeated use and possible training for staff. Moreover, as with the psychometric study, some items were found to be too complex for patients. | 80.0%; 12 out of 15). |
|
| 16-item measure that is relevant for patients with terminal illness. The questionnaire has undergone scrupulous development via a four-phase process, which has involved item generation and reduction, construction, pilot testing, and field testing | Good psychometric testing standards | Cross-cultural studies may be needed to ascertain whether the QLQ-EOL is relevant for patients from other countries and cultures | (73.3%; 11 out of 15) |