| Literature DB >> 30636637 |
Kara Schick-Makaroff1, Onouma Thummapol2, Stephanie Thompson3, Rachel Flynn2, Mehri Karimi-Dehkordi4, Scott Klarenbach3, Richard Sawatzky5,6,7, Joanne Greenhalgh8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported outcomes and experience measures (jointly referred to here as PROs) are internationally recognized as a means for patients to provide information about their quality of life, symptoms, and experiences with care. Although increasingly recognized as key to improving the quality of healthcare at individual (e.g., patients, caregivers, and providers) and aggregate (e.g., government, policy/system-wide decision-making) levels, there are important knowledge gaps in our understanding of how PROs are, and can be, used across different settings, particularly in nephrology to enhance person-centered care. This knowledge is needed for developing strategies to guide optimal use of PROs in nephrology care. Currently, no strategies exist. The purpose of this review is to address this knowledge gap by answering the following realist question: How can PROs be used to enhance person-centered nephrology care, both at individual and aggregate levels?Entities:
Keywords: Clinical kidney practice; Knowledge translation; Patient-reported experience measures (PREMs); Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs); Patient-reported outcomes (PROs); Person-centered care; Quality of care; Quality of life; Realist synthesis/review
Year: 2019 PMID: 30636637 PMCID: PMC6330465 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0911-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Key definitions: context, mechanism, and outcome
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Context | The conditions “that triggers and/or modifies the behaviour of mechanisms” [ |
| Mechanism | The causal forces that generate outcomes, yet they are not linear, arising from the diverse participants and contexts [ |
| Outcome | The “intended outcomes (did the project succeed against the criteria it set itself at the outset)…, the intermediate outcomes as well as unplanned and/or unexpected impacts” [ |
Stages of realist synthesis
| Stage of realist synthesis | Relationship to study objective | Current progress |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Identify and refine scope and focus of review | Obj. 1: To understand theories that explain how PROs are used | Completed |
| 2. Create an initial program theory to be tested and refined through evidence | Obj. 1 | Completed |
| 3.Search for evidence | Obj. 2: To develop a kidney-specific program theory about use of PROs in nephrology that may enhance person-centered care by testing and refining the theory through a realist synthesis of the empirical literature | Initiated |
| 4. Screen, select, and appraise articles | Obj. 2 | To be completed |
| 5. Extract and code the data. | Obj. 2 | To be completed |
| 6. Synthesize extracted evidence and refine program theory | Obj. 2 | To be completed |
| 7. Develop and disseminate KT products | Obj. 3:To develop knowledge translation (KT) products for kidney practitioners and knowledge users that will facilitate the optimal utilization of PROs in nephrology care. | To be completed |
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for objective 1 (to understand theories that explain how PROs are used)
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| (Must include 1 below and must include either 2 or 3 or 4 or 5) | |
| 1. All PRO measures (e.g., healthcare provider outcomes, quality of care outcomes) either at individual (patients, healthcare providers) OR aggregate (system e.g., use of the PRO information for quality improvement purposes) levels, OR healthcare experience measures. | 1. Articles not written in English. |
During screening, the following criteria were applied. We asked the question, “Does this provide theoretical explanation about how PROs are used at an individual or aggregate level?”
Rater agreement
| No difference between the raters | Number of items |
|---|---|
| 121 | 132 |
| Percent agreement | 91.7% |
In order to assess rater agreement between two groups of raters, we first compiled the primary results (rated by the research coordinator and research assistants) into one group, and all the 10% double-screening results into another group. The percentage agreement between the two groups was 91.7%. Agreement between raters can be related to the initial practice screening at the very early stage, and the frequent team meetings that were regularly conducted to discuss all uncertainties that accumulated throughout the screening process
Fig. 1Screening process for the initial program theory
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for objective 2 (to develop a kidney-specific program theory about use of PROs in nephrology that may enhance person-centered care by testing and refining the theory through a realist synthesis of the empirical literature)
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| (Must include 1, 2, and 3 and must include 4 or 5 or 6) | (Must exclude at least one of 1 or 2 or 3) |
| 1. Source focused on nephrology population (e.g., patients [adults, pediatrics, transplant, CKD patients of all forms] and/or practitioners). | 1. The source is focused on exploring, evaluating, or reviewing psychometric properties of PRO use in nephrology (e.g., validity, reliability). |
In review of this literature, we will ask the question, “Does this provide any evidence, discussion, or conceptual/theoretical perspectives to test and refine our initial program theories for PRO use to enhance person-centered nephrology care at individual and/or aggregate levels?”