| Literature DB >> 35854183 |
Karlin Schroeder1,2, Neil Bertelsen3,2, Jessica Scott4,2,5, Katherine Deane6,2, Laura Dormer7,2, Devika Nair8,2, Jim Elliott9,2, Sarah Krug10,11,2, Ify Sargeant12, Hayley Chapman13, Nicholas Brooke14.
Abstract
Patients' experiences of their diagnosis, condition, and treatment (including the impact on their lives), and their experiences surrounding expectations of care, are becoming increasingly important in shaping healthcare systems that meet the evolving needs and priorities of different patient communities over time; this is an ongoing goal of all healthcare stakeholders. Current approaches that capture patient experiences with data are fragmented, resulting in duplication of effort, numerous requests for information, and increased patient burden. Application of patient experience data to inform healthcare decisions is still emerging and there remains an opportunity to align diverse stakeholders on the value of these data to strengthen healthcare systems. Given the collective value of understanding patient experiences across multiple stakeholder groups, we propose a more aligned approach to the collection of patient experience data. This approach is built on the principle that the patients' experiences are the starting point, and not just something to be considered at the end of the process. It must also be based on meaningful patient engagement, where patients are collaborators and decision makers at each step, thereby ensuring their needs and priorities are accurately reflected. The resulting data and evidence should be made available for all stakeholders, to inform their decision making and healthcare strategies in ways that meet patient priorities. We call for multi-stakeholder collaboration that will deliver healthcare systems and interventions that are better centered around and tailored to patient experiences, and that will help address patients' unmet needs.Entities:
Keywords: Collective value patient experience; Patient experience data; Patient-focused healthcare
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35854183 PMCID: PMC9356929 DOI: 10.1007/s43441-022-00432-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Innov Regul Sci ISSN: 2168-4790 Impact factor: 1.337
Different stakeholders are asking for the same kind of PXD
| Common themes | PXD requests from different stakeholder groupsa [ |
|---|---|
| Burden and impact of disease/condition | What are the signs and symptoms patients experience and how do these affect their day-to-day functioning and quality of life? How does this condition affect the day-to-day lives of people living with it in terms of challenging symptoms and activities that patients find difficult or unable to do? What are the aspects of the condition that are most important for patients to control? What disease effects matter most to patients that might be addressed by a medical therapy? What is the course of their disease over time, including the effect of the disease on patients’ day-to-day function and quality of life over time, and the changes that patients experience in their symptoms over time? |
| Burden and impact of treatment/trials | What are patients’ experiences with the treatments for their disease? How well do current medicines help patients manage this condition? What are the benefits/risks of current treatments, both in the short and long term? What is the burden of treatment (including the effect of treatment on activities of daily living and functioning) and/or the burden of participating in clinical studies? What treatment burdens matter most to patients that might be addressed by a medical therapy? What would be the best way to measure these disease or treatment burdens/effects in a clinical trial? What would be the most appropriate endpoints to use in clinical trials (and robust enough to inform regulatory decision making)? What is a clinically meaningful change in an endpoint from a patient perspective? How to define meaningful change in a patient over time? |
| Expectations for new (and current) treatments | What are the patient expectations of benefits? What are the potential QoL improvements and/or health outcomes? What aspects of patient needs or expectations could the new treatment potentially address? What are the potential impacts on caregivers and family such as potential reduced dependency and emotional and psychosocial impacts? What are acceptable trade-offs of benefits and risks (i.e., patient preference)? What methods and approaches could be used to identify which treatment benefits would be most desirable to obtain and which risks would be most important to avoid, or to explore what patients might consider to be acceptable trade-offs of increased expected harm(s) for a specified increase in expected benefit with a new medicinal product? What are patient attitudes towards uncertainty? What are patient views on unmet medical needs and available treatment options? |
| Emotional, psychosocial, employment, family, and other effects [ | How are patients feeling in terms of pain or discomfort, feeling low or worried, limited in what they can do, requiring help from others? How are patients feeling in general? How well do patients look after themselves? Have patients learned to live with what has happened? Thinking about way of life, such as education, feeling valued for what they do, being happy where they live, having enough money to cope—how do patients feel? Thinking about family and friends, having people to talk to, having someone to confide in, having people who will help—how do patients feel? How often do patients feel left out, alone, or lonely? How safe do patients personally feel at home and outside of home? |
aExamples from regulators, health technology assessment organizations, and pharmaceutical companies, as well as PROMs or PREMs
PREMs Patient-reported experience measures, PROMs Patient-reported outcome measures, PXD Patient experience data, QoL Quality of life
Fig. 1The collective value of PXD across diverse healthcare stakeholder groups provides opportunities for integration and a patient-engaged approach [19, 21, 22, 37–42]. PXD patient experience data
Fig. 2Cohesive approach to integrated PXD. PEX patient experience, PXD patient experience data