How much is enough? Considering minimally important change in youth mental health outcomes.

Karolin R Krause, Sarah E Hetrick, Darren B Courtney, Katherine Tombeau Cost, Nancy J Butcher, Martin Offringa, Suneeta Monga, Joanna Henderson, Peter Szatmari
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Abstract

To make decisions in mental health care, service users, clinicians, and administrators need to make sense of research findings. Unfortunately, study results are often presented as raw questionnaire scores at different time points and regression coefficients, which are difficult to interpret with regards to their clinical meaning. Other commonly reported treatment outcome indicators in clinical trials or meta-analyses do not convey whether a given change score would make a noticeable difference to service users. There is an urgent need to improve the interpretability and relevance of outcome indicators in youth mental health (aged 12-24 years), in which shared decision making and person-centred care are cornerstones of an ongoing global transformation of care. In this Personal View, we make a case for considering minimally important change (MIC) as a meaningful, accessible, and user-centred outcome indicator. We discuss what the MIC represents, how it is calculated, and how it can be implemented in dialogues between clinician and researcher, and between youth and clinician. We outline how use of the MIC could enhance reporting in clinical trials, meta-analyses, clinical practice guidelines, and measurement-based care. Finally, we identify current methodological challenges around estimating the MIC and areas for future research. Efforts to select outcome domains and valid measurement instruments that resonate with youth, families, and clinicians have increased in the past 5 years. In this context, now is the time to define demarcations of changes in outcome scores that are clinically relevant, and meaningful to youth and families. Through the use of MIC, youth-centred outcome measurement, analysis, and reporting would support youth-centred therapeutic decision making.

多少才够?考虑对青少年心理健康结果影响最小的变化。
为了在精神卫生保健方面做出决定,服务使用者、临床医生和管理人员需要理解研究结果。不幸的是,研究结果往往是不同时间点和回归系数的原始问卷得分,难以解释其临床意义。在临床试验或荟萃分析中,其他通常报告的治疗结果指标并没有传达给定的改变评分是否会对服务使用者产生显着差异。迫切需要改善青少年心理健康(12-24岁)结果指标的可解释性和相关性,在这些指标中,共同决策和以人为本的护理是正在进行的全球护理变革的基石。在本个人观点中,我们提出了将最小重要变化(MIC)视为有意义、可访问和以用户为中心的结果指标的案例。我们讨论了MIC代表什么,它是如何计算的,以及如何在临床医生和研究人员之间以及青年和临床医生之间的对话中实施它。我们概述了MIC的使用如何在临床试验、荟萃分析、临床实践指南和基于测量的护理中加强报告。最后,我们确定了当前在估计MIC和未来研究领域方面的方法挑战。在过去的5年里,努力选择与年轻人、家庭和临床医生产生共鸣的结果领域和有效的测量工具。在这种背景下,现在是时候定义与临床相关的、对青少年和家庭有意义的结果评分变化的界限了。通过使用MIC,以青年为中心的结果测量、分析和报告将支持以青年为中心的治疗决策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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