基础条件对慢性创伤患者生活质量测量的影响,以效用值衡量:一项补充研究综述。

IF 5.8 3区 医学 Q1 DERMATOLOGY
Advances in wound care Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-09 DOI:10.1089/wound.2023.0098
Kristen A Eckert, Caroline E Fife, Marissa J Carter
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引用次数: 0

摘要

意义:生活质量(QoL)对慢性伤口患者很重要,很少得到正式评估。了解哪些合并症对个体及其伤口的影响最大可能是一个关键指标。最近的进展:在过去的20年里,生活质量指标和将患者数据转换为一个称为健康效用指数(HUI)的单一值方面取得了重大进展。我们回顾了这些进展,以及与伤口相关的生活质量,并分析了现实世界中挑战伤口护理的合并症。关键问题:为了了解现实世界患者群体中潜在合并症的影响,我们检查了382名在医院门诊创伤中心就诊的患者的便利样本。这项质量报告研究不属于管理人类主题研究的法规范围。使用多种文献报道的方法,使用共病条件来计算HUI,同时在患者首次就诊期间收集伤口生活质量(W-QoL)问卷数据。每位患者的平均病情数为8例;229名患者(59.9%)的合并症/病症的效用值比伤口的效用值更差/更低。63名(16.5%)患者患有抑郁症和/或焦虑症,64名(16.8%)患者有病态肥胖,204名(53.4%)患者有步态和行动障碍,所有这些都可能影响W-QoL评分。平均最小效用值(0.5)在使用EuroQol 5 Dimension仪器报告伤口护理人群健康效用的13项研究的平均值的0.05个单位内。未来方向:与最低效用值相关的共病可能是对慢性伤口患者生活质量影响最大的因素。这一发现需要进一步调查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Impact of Underlying Conditions on Quality-of-Life Measurement Among Patients with Chronic Wounds, as Measured by Utility Values: A Review with an Additional Study.

The Impact of Underlying Conditions on Quality-of-Life Measurement Among Patients with Chronic Wounds, as Measured by Utility Values: A Review with an Additional Study.

The Impact of Underlying Conditions on Quality-of-Life Measurement Among Patients with Chronic Wounds, as Measured by Utility Values: A Review with an Additional Study.

Significance: Quality of life (QoL) is important to patients with chronic wounds and is rarely formally evaluated. Understanding what comorbidities most affect the individual versus their wounds could be a key metric. Recent Advances: The last 20 years have seen substantial advances in QoL instruments and conversion of patient data to a single value known as the health utilities index (HUI). We review these advances, along with wound-related QoL, and analyze real-world comorbidities challenging wound care. Critical Issues: To understand the impact of underlying comorbidities in a real-world patient population, we examined a convenience sample of 382 patients seen at a hospital-based outpatient wound center. This quality reporting study falls outside the regulations that govern human subject research. Comorbid conditions were used to calculate HUIs using a variety of literature-reported approaches, while Wound-Quality-of-Life (W-QoL) questionnaire data were collected from patients during their first visit. The mean number of conditions per patient was 8; 229 patients (59.9%) had utility values for comorbidities/conditions, which were worse/lower than their wounds' values. Sixty-three (16.5%) patients had depression and/or anxiety, 64 (16.8%) had morbid obesity, and 204 (53.4%) had gait and mobility disorders, all of which could have affected W-QoL scoring. The mean minimum utility value (0.5) was within 0.05 units of an average of 13 studies reporting health utilities from wound care populations using the EuroQol 5 Dimension instrument. Future Directions: The comorbidity associated with the lowest utility value is what might most influence the QoL of patients with chronic wounds. This finding needs further investigation.

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来源期刊
Advances in wound care
Advances in wound care Medicine-Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
4.10%
发文量
62
期刊介绍: Advances in Wound Care rapidly shares research from bench to bedside, with wound care applications for burns, major trauma, blast injuries, surgery, and diabetic ulcers. The Journal provides a critical, peer-reviewed forum for the field of tissue injury and repair, with an emphasis on acute and chronic wounds. Advances in Wound Care explores novel research approaches and practices to deliver the latest scientific discoveries and developments. Advances in Wound Care coverage includes: Skin bioengineering, Skin and tissue regeneration, Acute, chronic, and complex wounds, Dressings, Anti-scar strategies, Inflammation, Burns and healing, Biofilm, Oxygen and angiogenesis, Critical limb ischemia, Military wound care, New devices and technologies.
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