以患者为中心:对涉及患者使用网络信息系统的健康干预证据进行评估的方法学考虑。

Elizabeth Cummings, Paul Turner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

长期以来,为医疗保健干预措施建立证据库一直被视为专业和道德上的理想选择。通过支持对不同方法进行有意义的比较,良好的证据基础被视为优化临床决策、提高医疗安全和质量的重要因素。不难理解,医学研究为支持这一证据基础的发展付出了巨大努力,随机对照试验已成为主流方法。然而,最近有一系列研究开始质疑这种方法本身,而且质疑其所产生的证据在多大程度上可能会将患者的个人经历、优先考虑事项和看法边缘化。这些呼吁是由大量系统故障以及对医疗环境中信息系统方法局限性的担忧所引起的。除了信息系统可能产生积极的、消极的和非预期的后果之外,许多衡量成功、影响或效益的标准似乎与医疗服务、健康结果或病人个人经历的改善关系不大。鉴于当代临床和信息系统论述中关于健康干预的普遍主张,即有必要通过让患者参与自身护理和/或通过使用信息系统 "增强 "患者的能力,将 "患者置于中心",本文旨在通过关注在使用基于网络的信息系统的健康干预中衡量、定义和评估患者利益和结果的社会技术过程,为这些正在进行的辩论做出贡献。本文概述了一种综合方法,该方法旨在生成有关这类健康干预措施影响的证据,这些证据在患者个体和患者群体层面都具有意义。
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Patients at the centre: methodological considerations for evaluating evidence from health interventions involving patients use of web-based information systems.

Building an evidence base for healthcare interventions has long been advocated as both professionally and ethically desirable. By supporting meaningful comparison amongst different approaches, a good evidence base has been viewed as an important element in optimising clinical decision-making and the safety and quality of care. Unsurprisingly, medical research has put considerable effort into supporting the development of this evidence base, and the randomised controlled trial has become the dominant methodology. Recently however, a body of research has begun to question, not just this methodology per se, but also the extent to which the evidence it produces may marginalise individual patient experiences, priorities and perceptions.Simultaneously, the widespread adoption and utilisation of information systems (IS) in health care has also prompted initiatives to develop a stronger base of evidence about their impacts. These calls have been stimulated both by numerous system failures and research expressing concerns about the limitations of information systems methodologies in health care environments. Alongside the potential of information systems to produce positive, negative and unintended consequences, many measures of success, impact or benefit appear to have little to do with improvements in care, health outcomes or individual patient experiences.Combined these methodological concerns suggest the need for more detailed examination. This is particularly the case, given the prevalence within contemporary clinical and IS discourses on health interventions advocating the need to put the 'patient at the centre' by engaging them in their own care and/or 'empowering' them through the use of information systems.This paper aims to contribute to these on-going debates by focusing on the socio-technical processes by which patients' interests and outcomes are measured, defined and evaluated within health interventions that involve them using web-based information systems. The paper outlines an integrated approach that aims to generate evidence about the impact of these types of health interventions that are meaningful at both individual patient and patient cohort levels.

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