| Literature DB >> 35906026 |
Paul Studenic1,2, Tanja A Stamm3,4, Erika Mosor3,4, Ilaria Bini5,6, Nele Caeyers7, Laure Gossec8,9, Marios Kouloumas10, Elena Nikiphorou11,12, Wendy Olsder6,13, Ivan Padjen14, Sofia Ramiro15,16, Simon Stones7,17, Tanita-Christina Wilhelmer6,18, Alessia Alunno19,20.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: arthritis; outcome assessment, health care; patient reported outcome measures
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35906026 PMCID: PMC9345076 DOI: 10.1136/rmdopen-2022-002576
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RMD Open ISSN: 2056-5933
Overarching principles and points to consider for including the perspective of young patients with IA into PROMs
| Overarching principles | LoA | |||
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| IA has a considerable impact on all aspects of the life of young people, and PROMs are useful to measure part of this impact | 9.69 (±0.63), | ||
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| The value of PROMs is optimised when young people with IA are informed and empowered | 9.92 (0.28), | ||
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| PROMs are useful when integrated in the communication between young people with IA and rheumatologists/other health professionals who are involved in their care. | 9.77 (0.44), | ||
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| PROMs inform shared decision-making for young people with IA. | 9.31 (0.18), | ||
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| Young people with IA should be informed about the purpose and relevance of PROMs. | 5 | D | 9.85 (0.37), |
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| Young people with IA should have the possibility to access their personal PROM data. | 5 | D | 9.31 (1.18), |
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| Healthcare providers and young people with IA should discuss the results of PROMs and integrate them into shared decision making. | 5 | D | 9.78 (0.44), |
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| Different PROMs assess various domains and should therefore be used to cover a broad spectrum of the disease. | 5 | D | 9.15 (1.82), |
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| Healthcare providers should ascertain the willingness of young people with IA to talk about issues such as body image and life plans, and discuss these domains respecting the patients’ preferences. | 5 | D | 9.54 (1.13), |
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| The assessment of a young person with IA should encompass items and domains of his/her daily life such as psychosocial issues, participation in social activities, education/work, sports and using technologic devices. | 5 | C | 9.46 (1.20), |
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| The schedule of PROMs assessment should be agreed on by the healthcare provider and the young person with IA, to balance frequency versus inconvenience. | 5 | D | 9.46 (1.05), |
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| Online and e-solutions for PROMs should be used when possible and convenient for young people with IA. | 5 | D | 9.92 (0.28), |
Numbers in the column ‘LoA’ indicate the mean (SD) of the LoA, and the percentage of task force members with a LoA of at least 8 (0–10); based on the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine classification
IA, inflammatory arthritis; LoA, level of agreement; LoE, level of evidence; PROMs, patient-reported outcome measures.