P407 Validation of a newly developed patient-reported experience measure for people with Inflammatory Bowel Disease

N. Totton, E. Sheldon, N. Ezaydi, M. Bursnall, D. Hind, R. Wakeman, A. Lobo
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Abstract

Patient-Reported Experience Measures (PREMs) assess a patient’s healthcare experiences and are important to improve the quality of healthcare. A PREM specific to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) was co-produced with service users. This study aimed to validate the PREM. The IBD PREM contains 38-items and comprises three domains: ‘the care team’, ‘what matters to me’, and ‘living with Crohn’s or Colitis’. Scores can be calculated for each domain and summated to give a total score. Validation was completed on data collected from participants who completed the PREM every 3 months alongside the IBD-Control measure of disease activity at a single UK tertiary IBD service. The PREM was assessed for acceptability; reliability (internal consistency and repeatability); known groups validity; criterion validity and responsiveness. Face and content validity were completed before finalisation using ‘Think Aloud’ interviews. The dataset used for validation was extracted in September 2023 and contained responses from 287 participants (63% female, 89% White British, median age: 52) comprising 1,699 PREM responses between November 2021 and August 2023. Acceptability was demonstrated with very low rates of missing data (four items with >5% missing) and median submission duration of 4.8 minutes (IQR: 3.6 – 6.6). High Cronbach’s alpha scores (0.85, 0.97, 0.88 and 0.97 for each of the domains and total PREM score respectively) show internal consistency of the measure. However, the particularly high value on one domain and the total score suggest some overlapping items may remain. An intraclass corelation coefficient of 0.88 (95% CI: 0.85 to 0.91) suggests good repeat reliability over a two-week timeframe. Good comprehension of the measure by service users satisfied face and content validity. Known groups validity was supported with lower score on ‘living with Crohn’s or Colitis’ domain the for those with an IBD Control score of less than 13 by 0.38 (95% CI: 0.23 to 0.54), p<0.001). A low to moderate correlation of 0.37 (95% CI: 0.32 to 0.42) was found between the total PREM score and the IBD Control score, as expected. Ceiling and floor effects had a maximum of 6% demonstrating potential responsiveness of the PREM. The change over a year detected by those that stated that had experienced a change was 0.53 (95% CI: 0.41 to 0.66, n=38) on a five-point scale.Conclusion The co-produced PREM is an acceptable, valid, reliable, and responsive tool to measure experience of IBD care for quality improvement. Further work should assess the potential for item reduction as well as correlation to other related measures.
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P407 针对炎症性肠病患者新开发的患者报告体验测量方法的验证
患者体验报告(Patient-Reported Experience Measures,PREMs)用于评估患者的医疗保健体验,对提高医疗保健质量非常重要。一项专门针对炎症性肠病(IBD)的 PREM 是与服务使用者共同制定的。本研究旨在验证该 PREM。 IBD PREM 包含 38 个项目,由三个领域组成:护理团队"、"对我来说重要的事情 "和 "克罗恩病或结肠炎患者的生活"。可计算每个领域的得分,然后求和得出总分。在英国的一家三级 IBD 服务机构中,参与者每 3 个月完成一次 PREM,同时完成 IBD-Control 疾病活动度测量,对收集到的数据进行了验证。对 PREM 进行了可接受性、可靠性(内部一致性和可重复性)、已知群体有效性、标准有效性和响应性评估。在最终确定之前,还通过 "大声思考 "访谈完成了表面和内容效度评估。 用于验证的数据集于 2023 年 9 月提取,包含 287 名参与者(63% 为女性,89% 为英国白人,年龄中位数为 52 岁)在 2021 年 11 月至 2023 年 8 月期间的 1,699 份 PREM 回复。数据缺失率非常低(4 个项目缺失率大于 5%),提交时间中位数为 4.8 分钟(IQR:3.6 - 6.6),可接受性良好。高 Cronbach's alpha 分数(各领域和 PREM 总分分别为 0.85、0.97、0.88 和 0.97)显示了测量的内部一致性。然而,一个领域和总分的数值特别高,表明可能存在一些重叠项目。类内相关系数为 0.88(95% CI:0.85 至 0.91),表明在两周时间内重复测量的可靠性良好。服务使用者对测量结果的良好理解满足了表面效度和内容效度的要求。IBD控制得分低于13分的人群在 "克罗恩病或结肠炎患者生活 "领域的得分较低,得分率为0.38(95% CI:0.23-0.54),p<0.001),这证明了已知的群体效度。正如预期的那样,PREM 总分与 IBD 控制得分之间存在 0.37(95% CI:0.32 至 0.42)的中低度相关性。上限和下限效应的最大值为 6%,显示了 PREM 的潜在反应能力。结论:共同制作的 PREM 是一种可接受的、有效的、可靠的、反应灵敏的工具,可用于测量 IBD 护理经验,以促进质量改进。下一步工作应评估减少项目的可能性以及与其他相关测量方法的相关性。
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