• Center on Health Equity and Access
  • Clinical
  • Health Care Cost
  • Health Care Delivery
  • Insurance
  • Policy
  • Technology
  • Value-Based Care

Dr Sophia Smith Highlights the Importance of Patient-Reported Outcomes

Video

Listening to patient-reported outcomes, especially in clinical trials, is extremely important, especially the array of technology available to collect this information, said Sophia K. Smith, PhD, MSW, associate professor at the Duke School of Nursing.

Listening to patient-reported outcomes, especially in clinical trials, is extremely important, especially the array of technology available to collect this information, said Sophia K. Smith, PhD, MSW, associate professor at the Duke School of Nursing.

Transcript (modified)

Can the introduction of patient-centeredness in clinical trials, such as measures of patient-reported outcomes (PROs), be considered palliative care?

I’m a big proponent of hearing from the patient. I think PROs are extremely important, particularly in clinical trials. There’s different ways to collect this information. I think that we should really look at technology to help leverage that with electronic patient-reported outcomes systems

I know that a lot of our medical systems have electronic health records now, such as Epic, and they actually have survey capability built in. There’s other tools such as Apple Research Kit, where we can provide surveys on mobile devices, so a lot of our patients, particularly our younger patients and our patients who may use their smartphone as their only connection to the internet, being able to put these PROs out there for them to use on their mobile devices is really important.

I am also a big proponent of the distress thermometers, so you could probably characterize that as a PRO, but each time our cancer patients come in for their treatment or a visit we ask them how distressed they are and then we list a series of areas that they might be distressed in. For example, financial distress, emotional distress, maybe relationship problems, maybe some spiritual crisis. So that’s another form of PROs and, again, as early in the process as you can introduce these things the better.

Related Videos
Screenshot of Angela Jia, MD, PhD, during a video interview
Nancy Dreyer, MPH, PhD, FISE, chief scientific advisor to Picnic Health
Screenshot of Alexander Kutikov, MD, during a video interview
Screenshot of Mary Dunn, MSN, NP-C, OCN, RN, during a video interview
Seth Berkowitz, MD, MPH, associate professor of medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Inma Hernandez, PharmD, PhD, professor at the University of California, San Diego Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences
Binod Dhakal, MD
Screenshot of Joshua Meeks, MD, PhD, during a video interview
Screenshot of Yuzhi Wang, MD, in a video interview
Screenshot of Neal Shore, MD, in a video interview
Related Content
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences
AJMC®
All rights reserved.