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Tailoring and Evaluating Treatment with the...
Journal article

Tailoring and Evaluating Treatment with the Patient-Specific Needs Evaluation: A Patient-Centered Approach

Abstract

BACKGROUND: No patient-reported instrument assesses patient-specific information needs, treatment goals, and personal meaningful gain (PMG), a novel construct evaluating individualized, clinically relevant improvement. This study reports the development of the Patient-Specific Needs Evaluation (PSN) and examines its discriminative validity (ie, its ability to distinguish satisfied from dissatisfied patients) and test-retest reliability in patients with hand or wrist conditions. METHODS: A mixed-methods approach was used to develop and validate the PSN, following Consensus-Based Standards for the Selection of Health Measurement Instruments guidelines, including pilot testing, a survey (pilot, n = 223; final PSN, n = 275), cognitive debriefing ( n = 16), expert input, and validation. Discriminative validity was assessed by comparing the satisfaction level of patients who did and did not achieve their PMG ( n = 1985) and test-retest reliability using absolute agreement, the Cohen kappa, and intraclass correlation coefficients ( n = 102). The authors used a sample of 2860 patients to describe responses to the final PSN. RESULTS: The PSN has only 5 questions (completion time, ±3 minutes) and is freely accessible online. The items and response options were considered understandable by 90% to 92% of the end-users and complete by 84% to 89%. The PSN had excellent discriminative validity (Cramer V, 0.48; P < 0.001) and moderate to high test-retest reliability (kappa, 0.46 to 0.68; intraclass correlation coefficients, 0.53 to 0.73). CONCLUSIONS: The PSN is a freely available, patient-centered decision support tool that helps clinicians tailor their consultations to patients' individual needs and goals. It contains the PMG, a novel construct evaluating individualized, clinically relevant treatment outcomes. The PSN may function as a conversation starter, facilitate expectation management, and aid shared decision-making. The PSN is implementation-ready and can be readily adapted to other patient populations.

Authors

de Ridder WA; van Kooij YE; Slijper HP; Arends GR; de Roode A; MacDermid JC; Vermeulen GM; Hovius SER; Selles RW; Wouters RM

Journal

Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery, Vol. 154, No. 4, pp. 787–799

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

October 1, 2024

DOI

10.1097/prs.0000000000011199

ISSN

0032-1052

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