Session 2 - Quality of Life, Long Term Conditions and Mental Health Flashcards
List some reasons as to why we measure health.
- To be able to assess need for healthcare
- To target resources to this need
- To assess the effectiveness of health interventions
- To evaluate the quality of health sevices
- To monitor the progress of patients.
What are 3 commonly used measures of health?
- Mortality
- Morbidity
- Patient-based outcomes
What is meant by ‘Patient Based Outcomes’?
Why are they used?
- The attempt to assess well-being from the patient’s point of view. Methods include PROMs (measures scores before and after treatment) and HRQoL.
- Useful in a healthcare system where there is an increase in conditions that require managing rather than curing.
- Advantageous in that they focus on the patient’s concerns (akin to a consumer)
How might Patient Based Outcomes be used?
- Clinically
- To assess benefits against costs
- To measure the health status of populations
- To compare interventions in a clinical trial
- To measure overall service quality.
What have PROMs been introduced?
- To improve the clinical management of patients (informed, shared decision making).
- To enable a comparison of hospitals
What procedures to PROMs currently cover?
- Hip replacements.
- Knee replacements.
- Groin hernia.
- Varicose Vein.
Outline some of the challenges with PROMs.
- Trying to minimise the time and cost of collection, anaylsis and presentation of data.
- Achieving high rates of patient participation.
- Avoiding misuse of PROMs.
Define Health Related Quality of Life.
Quality of life in clinical medicine represents the functional effect of an illness and its consequent therapy upon a patient, as perceived by the patient.
What are some of the dimensions to HRQoL?
- Physical function (mobility, dexterity, range of movement, ADLs)
- Symptoms (pain, nausea, appetite, energy, vitality)
- Psychological well-being
- Social well-being (intimate relations, social contact)
- Cognitive functioning (concentration, memory)
- Personal constructs (satisfaction with appearance)
- Satisfaction with care
What criteria (2) should using a PROM to measure HRQoL meet?
Reliability - is it accurante over time and internally consistent?
Validity - does it measure what it is meant to measure?
What are GENERIC instruments in the context of HRQoL, and what are the advantages of these?
- Cover perceptions of overall health and can be used with any population.
- EXAMPLE = SF-36
- Wide-ranging
- Enable comparision across treatment groups
- Can be used to assess the health of populations
- Useful if there is no disease-specific tool.
What are some disadvantages of GENERIC instruments?
- Less detailed (because they are general)
- Potentially not relevant enough
- Less sensitive to changes that occur
- Less acceptable to patients on occasion.
Outline the 8 categories of the SF-36.
- Physical functioning
- Social functioning
- Role functioning (physical)
- Role functioning (emotional)
- Bodily pain
- Vitality
- General health
- Mental health
What is the EuroQoL EQ-5D?
Tool which generates a single index value for health status whereby full health = 1 and death = 0.
It has 5 dimension - mobility, self-care, ADLs, pain/discomfort & anxiety/depression.
These each have 3 levels - no problems, some problems and extreme problems
Outline the advantages and disadvantages of SPECIFIC instruments.
ADVANTAGES:
- Relevant content
- Sensitive to change
- Acceptable to patients.
DISADVANTAGES:
- Limited comparison
- Disease specific
- May not detect unexpected effects