Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment

Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a multi-dimensional and complex syndrome. Outcome measures are important for determining both the efficacy and quality of care and capturing the patient’s perspective in evaluating the outcomes of health care delivery. Capturing the patient’s perspective via patient-re...

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Main Authors: Chang, Sungwon, Newton, Phillip, Inglis, S., Luckett, T., Krum, H., Macdonald, P., Davidson, Patricia
Format: Journal Article
Published: Springer New York LLC 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5331
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author Chang, Sungwon
Newton, Phillip
Inglis, S.
Luckett, T.
Krum, H.
Macdonald, P.
Davidson, Patricia
author_facet Chang, Sungwon
Newton, Phillip
Inglis, S.
Luckett, T.
Krum, H.
Macdonald, P.
Davidson, Patricia
author_sort Chang, Sungwon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a multi-dimensional and complex syndrome. Outcome measures are important for determining both the efficacy and quality of care and capturing the patient’s perspective in evaluating the outcomes of health care delivery. Capturing the patient’s perspective via patient-reported outcomes is increasingly important; however, including objective measures such as mortality would provide more complete account of outcomes important to patients. Currently, no single measure for CHF outcomes captures all dimensions of the quality of care from the patient’s perspective. To describe the role of outcome measures in CHF from the perspective of patients, a structured literature review was undertaken. This review discusses the concepts and methodological issues related to measurement of CHF outcomes. Outcome assessment at the level of the patient, provider and health care system were identified as being important. The perspectives of all stakeholders should be considered when developing an outcomes measurement suite to inform CHF health care. This paper recommends that choice of outcome measures should depend on their ability to provide a comprehensive, comparable, meaningful and accurate assessment that are important to patient.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-53312017-09-13T14:41:03Z Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment Chang, Sungwon Newton, Phillip Inglis, S. Luckett, T. Krum, H. Macdonald, P. Davidson, Patricia Chronic heart failure (CHF) is a multi-dimensional and complex syndrome. Outcome measures are important for determining both the efficacy and quality of care and capturing the patient’s perspective in evaluating the outcomes of health care delivery. Capturing the patient’s perspective via patient-reported outcomes is increasingly important; however, including objective measures such as mortality would provide more complete account of outcomes important to patients. Currently, no single measure for CHF outcomes captures all dimensions of the quality of care from the patient’s perspective. To describe the role of outcome measures in CHF from the perspective of patients, a structured literature review was undertaken. This review discusses the concepts and methodological issues related to measurement of CHF outcomes. Outcome assessment at the level of the patient, provider and health care system were identified as being important. The perspectives of all stakeholders should be considered when developing an outcomes measurement suite to inform CHF health care. This paper recommends that choice of outcome measures should depend on their ability to provide a comprehensive, comparable, meaningful and accurate assessment that are important to patient. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5331 10.1007/s10741-012-9369-0 Springer New York LLC restricted
spellingShingle Chang, Sungwon
Newton, Phillip
Inglis, S.
Luckett, T.
Krum, H.
Macdonald, P.
Davidson, Patricia
Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title_full Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title_fullStr Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title_full_unstemmed Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title_short Are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? An argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
title_sort are all outcomes in chronic heart failure rated equally? an argument for a patient-centred approach to outcome assessment
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/5331