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Full Description
This book shows how PROMs and PREMs can help improve patient experience and outcomes. Part 1 covers the core principles of PROMs and PREMs, including their strengths and weaknesses, reporting and analysis, data sharing and valuation. Part 2 covers measures of patient experience, health status, wellbeing, self-efficacy, individualized measures, social determinants of health and impact evaluation. It concludes with a discussion of staff-reported measures, proxies and caregivers.
Patient-Reported Outcomes and Experience: Measuring What We Want with PROMs and PREMs concisely covers how to use these measures successfully to improve patient experience of healthcare services and associated outcomes. It is a critical resource for trainee and practicing clinicians, managers, analysts and policymakers seeking an up-to-date reference on the latest developments in this rapidly expanding field.
Contents
Why PROMs and PREMs matter?.- History.- Terminology.- Why PROMs are Hard: People.- Noise and complexity.- Analysis.- Interoperability.- Value of health and lives.- Patient-reported measures.- Patient experience.- Health status.- Wellbeing.- Patient-centred Care.- Individualised Measures.- Social factors.- Innovation Evaluation.- Staff-reported measures.- Proxies, caregivers and care home residents.