| Literature DB >> 35292028 |
Martin Härter1, Levente Kriston1, Lisa Lebherz2, Elisa Fraune1, Götz Thomalla3, Marc Frese4, Hannes Appelbohm3, David Leander Rimmele3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) assess patient-relevant effects of medical treatments. We aimed to evaluate the implementation of the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement Standard Set for Stroke (ICHOM-SSS) into routine inpatient care of a stroke unit.Entities:
Keywords: Feasibility; Implementation; Patient-reported outcome measures; Qualitative methods; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35292028 PMCID: PMC8925160 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-022-07722-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Procedure of the evaluated intervention. The shaded icons denote planned but not realised procedures, see results and discussion. The icons were retrieved from https://icons8.com; EHA = Electronic Health Record, PROM = Patient-reported outcome measure
Qualitative outcomes for implementation research by Proctor et al. (2011) [16]
| Outcome | Definition |
|---|---|
| intent and engagement in the realisation of the intervention including necessary adoptions to fit the setting | |
| stakeholders’ satisfaction with the implementation of the intervention | |
| perceived relevance of the intervention and its compatibility with the setting | |
| the extent of successful execution of the intervention | |
| the extent of maintenance of the intervention in the designated setting |
Fig. 2Thematic analysis. We used a mainly deductive framework analysis approach, see Gale et al., (2013) [20]
Fig. 3Flow chart of patient and proxy interviews
Demography of interview partners
| Variable | Patient sample | Staff sample |
|---|---|---|
| Age, mean (SD) | 73.42 (13.9) | |
| Gender, N (%) | ||
| Female | 11 (57.9%) | 2 (40%) |
| Male | 8 (42.1%) | 3 (60%) |
| smRSq | ||
| 0 | 4 | |
| 1 | 5 | |
| 2 | 3 | |
| 3 | 3 (3 PP) | |
| 4 | 2 (1 PP) | |
| 5 | 2 (2 PP) | |
| Profession | ||
| Quality Management | 1 | |
| Medical care | 3 | |
| IT | 1 | |
SD Standard deviation, smRSq simplified modified Rankin Scale [13] questionnaire, PP Patient proxy interviews
Fig. 4Phase 4 in thematic analysis; schematic model of association between themes and concepts. Arrows indicate expected direction and strength of influence; shades highlight a priori selected outcomes, SOP = standard operating procedure
Summary of main themes, source of information and appraisal for each outcome
| Outcome | Participant | Appraisal |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptance | ||
| Willingness to help scientific advances | Patient | Positive |
| Fear of giving away information | Patient | Negative |
| Workload | Staff | Negative |
| Patient-centeredness | Both | Positive |
| Appropriateness | ||
| Questionnaire suitable | Both | Positive |
| Opportunity for better communication | Both | Positive |
| No recommended actions | Staff | Negative |
| Feasibility | ||
| Feasible for mildly affected patients | Patient | Positive |
| Difficult for severely affected patients | Patient | Negative |
| Feasible to integrate digitally in EHR | Staff | Positive |
| Not feasible to trigger assessment and retrieve medical data | Staff | Negative |
| Too much time for nurses | Staff | Negative |
| Difficult to reach patients in the long-term | Both | Negative |
| Adaption | ||
| No implementation, for scientific data collection only | Staff | Negative |
| Adjustments to assessment procedures (baseline and long-term) | Staff | Negative |
| Sustainability | ||
| SOPs needed | Staff | Negative |
| Need to simplify and digitalise procedures | Staff | Negative |
| Leaner assessment needed | Staff | Negative |
| Software solution needed | ||
| Better retrieval of documentation data needed | Staff | Negative |