A Qualitative Study of Electronic Patient-Reported Outcome Symptom Monitoring After Thoracic Surgery

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 SURGERY
Alix Boisson-Walsh PhD , Chase Cox MD, MS , Meghan O'Leary PhD , Sachita Shrestha MPH , Philip Carr MPH , Amanda L. Gentry MPH , Lauren Hill PhD , Bernice Newsome AGNP , Jason Long MD, MPH , Benjamin Haithcock MD , Angela M. Stover PhD , Ethan Basch MD, MSc , Jennifer Leeman DrPH, MPH, MDiv , Gita N. Mody MD, MPH, FACS
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Abstract

Introduction

Thoracic surgery is a mainstay of therapy for lung cancer and other chronic pulmonary conditions, but recovery is often complicated. Digital health systems can facilitate remote postoperative symptom management yet obstacles persist in their routine clinical adoption. This study aimed to identify patient-perceived barriers and facilitators to using an electronic patient-reported outcome (ePRO) monitoring platform specially designed to detect complications from thoracic surgery postdischarge.

Methods

Patients (n = 16) who underwent thoracic surgery and participated in an ePRO parent study completed semistructured interviews, which were analyzed using thematic content analysis and iterative team-based coding. Themes were mapped onto the three domains of the Capability, Opportunity, and Motivation Model of behavior framework to inform ePRO design and implementation improvements.

Results

Analysis demonstrated seven dominant themes, including barriers (1. postoperative patient physical and mental health, 2. lack of access to email and poor internet connectivity, 3. lack of clarity on ePRO use in routine clinical care, and 4. symptom item redundancy) as well as facilitators (5. ease of the ePRO assessment completion, 6. engagement with the surgical care team on ePRO use, and 7. increased awareness of symptom experience through ePRO use). Suggested ePRO improvements included offering alternatives to web-based completion, tailoring symptom assessments to individual patients, and the need for patient education on ePROs for perioperative care.

Conclusions

Addressable barriers and facilitators to implementation of ePRO symptom monitoring in the thoracic surgical patient population postdischarge have been identified. Future work will test the impact of design improvements on implementation outcomes of feasibility and acceptability.
胸外科手术后电子患者报告结果症状监测的定性研究。
简介胸外科手术是治疗肺癌和其他慢性肺部疾病的主要手段,但术后恢复往往比较复杂。数字医疗系统可促进远程术后症状管理,但其常规临床应用仍存在障碍。本研究旨在确定患者在使用专为检测胸外科手术出院后并发症而设计的电子患者报告结果(ePRO)监测平台时所遇到的障碍和促进因素:接受胸外科手术并参与 ePRO 父母研究的患者(n = 16)完成了半结构式访谈,访谈采用主题内容分析和基于团队的迭代编码法进行分析。主题被映射到能力、机会和动机行为模型框架的三个领域,为 ePRO 的设计和实施改进提供信息:结果:分析显示了七个主要的主题,包括障碍(1.术后患者的身心健康;2.无法使用电子邮件和网络连接不畅;3.常规临床护理中使用 ePRO 的情况不明确;4.症状项目冗余)和促进因素(5.完成 ePRO 评估的难易程度;6.手术护理团队参与 ePRO 的使用;7.通过使用 ePRO 提高对症状体验的认识)。建议的 ePRO 改进措施包括:提供网络完成评估的替代方法、根据患者个体情况定制症状评估,以及在围手术期护理中对患者进行有关 ePRO 的教育:结论:在胸外科患者出院后实施 ePRO 症状监测的障碍和促进因素已经确定。未来的工作将检验设计改进对可行性和可接受性实施结果的影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.50%
发文量
627
审稿时长
138 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Surgical Research: Clinical and Laboratory Investigation publishes original articles concerned with clinical and laboratory investigations relevant to surgical practice and teaching. The journal emphasizes reports of clinical investigations or fundamental research bearing directly on surgical management that will be of general interest to a broad range of surgeons and surgical researchers. The articles presented need not have been the products of surgeons or of surgical laboratories. The Journal of Surgical Research also features review articles and special articles relating to educational, research, or social issues of interest to the academic surgical community.
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