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Rehabilitation and Therapy Commons

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Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy

Series

2020

Patient-reported outcomes

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Full-Text Articles in Rehabilitation and Therapy

Role Of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures On Predicting Outcome Of Bunion Surgery, Ashlee Macdonald, Jeff Houck, Judith F. Baumhauer Feb 2020

Role Of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures On Predicting Outcome Of Bunion Surgery, Ashlee Macdonald, Jeff Houck, Judith F. Baumhauer

Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy

Background: Prior studies have suggested preoperative patient-reported outcome scores could predict patients who would achieve a clinically meaningful improvement with hallux valgus surgery. Our goal was to determine bunionectomyspecific thresholds using Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) values to predict patients who would or would not benefit from bunion surgery.

Methods: PROMIS physical function (PF), pain interference (PI), and depression assessments were prospectively collected. Forty-two patients were included in the study. Using preoperative and final follow-up visit scores, minimally clinically important differences (MCID), receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, and area under the curve (AUC) analyses were performed to determine if …


Can Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (Promis) Measures Accurately Enhance Understanding Of Acceptable Symptoms And Functioning In Primary Care?, Ryan Jacobson, Daniel Kang, Jeff Houck Jan 2020

Can Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (Promis) Measures Accurately Enhance Understanding Of Acceptable Symptoms And Functioning In Primary Care?, Ryan Jacobson, Daniel Kang, Jeff Houck

Faculty Publications - College of Physical Therapy

Background: Value-based healthcare models will require prioritization of the patient’s voice in their own care toward better outcomes. The Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (PROMIS) gives patients a voice and leads providers to actionable treatments across a broad range of diagnoses. However, better interpretation of PROMIS measures is needed. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of PROMIS Physical Function (PF), Self-Efficacy for Managing Symptoms (SE), Pain Interference (PI), Fatigue, and Depression measures to discriminate patient acceptable symptom state (PASS) in primary care, determining if that accuracy is stable over time and/or retained when PROMIS score thresholds …