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Clinical Outcomes Mary Haven Research Methodologies in Allied Health

Clinical Outcomes

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Clinical Outcomes. Mary Haven Research Methodologies in Allied Health. Objectives. Name at least four measures of clinical outcomes Explain the output from a SF-36 assessment Formulate at least six questions for a patient satisfaction survey - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Clinical Outcomes

Clinical Outcomes

Mary HavenResearch Methodologies in Allied Health

Page 2: Clinical Outcomes
Page 3: Clinical Outcomes
Page 4: Clinical Outcomes
Page 5: Clinical Outcomes

Objectives

• Name at least four measures of clinical outcomes

• Explain the output from a SF-36 assessment

• Formulate at least six questions for a patient satisfaction survey

• Discuss how the perspective of the evaluator can influence selection of outcome measures

Page 6: Clinical Outcomes

Quality and Outcomes

“The best measure of quality is not how well or how frequently a medical service is given, but how closely the result approaches the fundamental objectives of prolonging life, relieving distress, restoring function, and preventing disability.” Lembcke, 1952

Page 7: Clinical Outcomes

Why go to the Patient?

“…achieving and producing health and satisfaction is the ultimate validator of the quality of care.”

Donabedian (1986)

Page 8: Clinical Outcomes

Outcome Definitions

• Changes in health status that can be attributed to care

• What comes out after you put something in

• Measurable events which occur as a result of the structure and process of health care

Page 9: Clinical Outcomes

Group Activities

• Identify a chronically ill patient, take the SF-36 from her/his perspective

• Design an outcomes research project to convince a hospital administrator that your profession’s expertise is critical for quality patient care

• Design an outcomes research project to measure a new intervention in your field

Page 10: Clinical Outcomes

Titles of Outcomes Articles

• A comparison of physical therapy, chiropractic manipulation and provision of an educational booklet for the treatment of lower back pain

• Severity-adjusted mortality and length of stay in teaching and nonteaching hospitals

Page 11: Clinical Outcomes

Quality of Life after Knee Replacement

• Previous studies focused on– Improvements in joint mechanisms– Post-operative complications

• Patient assessments– Pain– Physical function of the knee– Physical function– Satisfaction with result– Context of overall health

Page 12: Clinical Outcomes

Types of Outcomes to Measure

• Mortality• Morbidity • Physiological/Physical • Patient Satisfaction• Patient Compliance• Health Related Quality of Life• Costs

Page 13: Clinical Outcomes

Mortality and Morbidity

• The traditional province of the physician

• Severity index necessary

Page 14: Clinical Outcomes

Physiological/Physical

• Often the domain of the allied health professional to be the practitioner who measures these variables

• Laboratory values• Functional status• Blood gases, coagulation tests• Radiographs, ultrasound, CT, MRI,

nuclear images

Page 15: Clinical Outcomes

Patient Satisfaction

• Examine a patient satisfaction survey from your institution

• Difficult to measure• Demanded of provider

groups by contracting entities

• Surveys easier than phone or individual interviews

Page 16: Clinical Outcomes

Health Related Quality of Life• Patient perceptions are crucial• Ability to engage in activities

of daily life– Self-care– Role function– Social function– Perceived well-being

• Let’s consider what the patients want

Page 17: Clinical Outcomes

Health Related Quality of Life Measures

• SF-36 (http://www.sf-36.org/demos/SF-36v2.html

)• COOP charts• Duke-UNC Health Profile• Sickness Impact Profile• McMaster Health Index

Questionnaire• Nottingham Health Profile• Quality of Well-Being Scale

Page 18: Clinical Outcomes
Page 19: Clinical Outcomes

Types of Outcomes to Measure

Costs

From whose perspective?•Patient•Institution•Society

Page 20: Clinical Outcomes

Cost-Effectiveness

•Dollars/life saved•Dollars/case of disease prevented•Dollars/year-life gained

Page 21: Clinical Outcomes

Cost-Benefit Analysis

Net social benefit of a program

•Radiation Safety Program$10 million/human life saved

•EPA$7.6 million/human life saved

•Childhood immunizationNo cost, saves money

Harvard School of Public Health

Page 22: Clinical Outcomes

Cost-Utility

Measure of effect per quality-adjusted life years (QALY’s) gained

Program Reported cost/QAL (1993$)

PKU screening <0Coronary artery bypass $3,500NICU, 500-999g $6,300Hemodialysis $54,000

Page 23: Clinical Outcomes

Community Acquired Pneumonia Dr. Brent James

% patients admitted 39% 29%Average length of stay 6.4 days 4.3 daysTime to antibiotic 2.1 hrs 1.5 hrsAverage cost/case $2752 $1424

Without guideline

With guideline

Page 24: Clinical Outcomes

Wilson-Cleary Model for Outcomes Research

PatientCharacteristics

EnvironmentCharacteristics

Biologic/ Physiologic

Variables

SymptomStatus

FunctionalStatus

GeneralHealth

Perceptions

OverallQOL

Page 25: Clinical Outcomes

Strengths of Outcomes Research

• Addresses a broad range of questions

• Takes into account patient preferences and the social utility of treatment outcomes

• More generalizable to community providers, patients, practices

• More immediate structural applications

Page 26: Clinical Outcomes

Limitations of Outcomes Research

• May not be able to prove causation

• May not adequately characterize treatments

• May not be able to control all biases, confounders and interactions

• Findings may be more vulnerable to misinterpretation and abuse

Page 27: Clinical Outcomes

• Data on risk adjusted mortality after CABG surgery made public since 1989

• Hospitals and surgeons identified• Data used to stimulate

improvement• Statewide risk-adjusted mortality

fell 41% in first 4 years (1989-92)

Public Release of Medical Outcomes Data in NY

Page 28: Clinical Outcomes

Randomized controlled trial of rehabilitation in CRD

• Subjects 39 men with dyspnea on exertion

• Randomized to treatment and non-treat.

• Treatment was rehab 6 wk.• Subjects who received rehab felt

better and improved 12 min walking and max. oxygen uptake initially and after 4 mos.

Page 29: Clinical Outcomes

Coronary risk factors in Type II diabetes: response to low-intensity aerobic exercise.

• Subjects were NIDDM, 9 female, 7 male

• Randomly assigned to treatment

• VO2 max, ht, wt, BP, pulse, treadmill test, blood glucose, total triglycerides and cholesterol

• Increase in VO2 max, decrease in BP, resting pulse, total triglycerides

Page 30: Clinical Outcomes

Occupational therapy helps elderly in study, OWH 1997

• Teach elderly people how to keep up their daily activities

• Improves physical and mental health

• Helps them live independently• Saves money by delaying reliance

on expensive nursing home care

Page 31: Clinical Outcomes

Group Activities

• Identify a chronically ill patient, take the SF-36 from her/his perspective

• Design an outcomes research project to convince a hospital administrator that your profession’s expertise is critical for quality patient care

• Design an outcomes research project to measure a new intervention in your filed