Health and Quality of Life Outcomes | |
Proceedings of Patient Reported Outcome Measure’s (PROMs) Conference Sheffield 2016: advances in patient reported outcomes research | |
Meeting Abstracts | |
Jeshika Singh1  Louise Longworth1  Subhash Pokhrel1  Amy Barrat2  James Wilson2  Bibhas Roy2  Dominic Marley2  Ruth Howells3  Andrew Trigg3  Til Wykes4  Samantha Waterman4  Dan Robotham4  Safarina Satkunanathan4  Diana Rose4  Chris Salisbury5  Mairead Murphy5  Sandra Hollinghurst5  Tim Croudace6  Charlotte Bramwell7  Jose M. Valderas7  Jaheeda Gangannagaripalli7  Ian Porter7  Jacki Routledge8  Susan Davidson8  Kevin Franks8  Kate Absolom8  Ann Henry8  Galina Velikova8  Patricia Holch8  Alex Gilbert8  Ray Fitzpatrick9  Julian Forder9  Órlaith Burke9  Angela Coulter9  Ines Rombach9  Michele Peters9  Crispin Jenkinson9  Caroline Potter9  Cheryl Hunter9  Oliver Rivero-Arias9  Laura Kelly9  Alastair Gray9  Elizabeth Gibbons9  Nasrin Nasr1,10  Donna Rowen1,10  John Brazier1,10  Jackie Elliott1,10  Hasan Basarir1,10  Katherine Stevens1,10  Alex Labeit1,10  Pamela Enderby1,10  Jill Carlton1,10  John Brazier1,10  Jan R. Boehnke1,11  Nils Gutacker1,12  Andrew Street1,12  | |
[1] Brunel University London, Uxbridge, UK;Central Manchester University Hospitals, Manchester, UK;DRG Abacus, Manchester, UK;Kings College London, London, UK;University of Bristol, Bristol, UK;University of Dundee, Dundee, UK;University of Exeter Medical School, Exeter, UK;University of Leeds, Leeds, UK;University of Oxford, Oxford, UK;University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK;University of York, York, North Yorkshire, UK;University of York, York, UK; | |
关键词: Multiple Imputation; Social Care; Response Shift; Evidence Review Group; Transformative Learning; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12955-016-0540-5 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
contentsS1 Using computerized adaptive testingTim CroudaceS2 Well-being: what is it, how does it compare to health and what are the implications of using it to inform health policyJohn BrazierO1 “Am I going to get better?”—Using PROMs to inform patients about the likely benefit of surgeryNils Gutacker, Andrew StreetO2 Identifying Patient Reported Outcome Measures for an electronic Personal Health RecordDan Robotham, Samantha Waterman, Diana Rose, Safarina Satkunanathan, Til WykesO3 Examining the change process over time qualitatively: transformative learning and response shiftNasrin Nasr, Pamela EnderbyO4 Developing a PROM to evaluate self-management in diabetes (HASMID): giving patients a voiceJill Carlton, Donna Rowen, Jackie Elliott, John Brazier, Katherine Stevens, Hasan Basarir, Alex LabeitO5 Development of the Primary Care Outcomes Questionnaire (PCOQ)Mairead Murphy, Sandra Hollinghurst, Chris SalisburyO6 Developing the PKEX score- a multimodal assessment tool for patients with shoulder problemsDominic Marley, James Wilson, Amy Barrat, Bibhas RoyO7 Applying multiple imputation to multi-item patient reported outcome measures: advantages and disadvantages of imputing at the item, sub-scale or score levelInes Rombach, Órlaith Burke, Crispin Jenkinson, Alastair Gray, Oliver Rivero-AriasO8 Integrating Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) into routine primary care for patients with multimorbidity: a feasibility studyIan Porter, Jaheeda Gangannagaripalli, Charlotte Bramwell, Jose M. ValderasO9 eRAPID: electronic self-report and management of adverse-events for pelvic radiotherapy (RT) patientsPatricia Holch, Susan Davidson, Jacki Routledge, Ann Henry, Kevin Franks, Alex Gilbert, Kate Absolom & Galina VelikovaO10 Patient reported outcomes (PROMs) based recommendation in clinical guidance for the management of chronic conditions in the United KingdomIan Porter, Jose M.ValderasO11 Cross-sectional and longitudinal parameter shifts in epidemiological data: measurement invariance and response shifts in cohort and survey data describing the UK’s Quality of LifeJan R. BoehnkeO12 Patient-reported outcomes within health technology decision making: current status and implications for future policyAndrew Trigg, Ruth HowellsO13 Can social care needs and well-being be explained by the EQ-5D? Analysis of Health Survey for England datasetJeshika Singh, Subhash Pokhrel, Louise LongworthO14 Where patients and policy meet: exploring individual-level use of the Long-Term Conditions Questionnaire (LTCQ)Caroline Potter, Cheryl Hunter, Laura Kelly, Elizabeth Gibbons, Julian Forder, Angela Coulter, Ray Fitzpatrick, Michele Peters
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© The Author(s). 2016
【 预 览 】
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RO202311102300720ZK.pdf | 282KB | download |