Patient and Public Involvement in Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Evolution Not Revolution

This paper considers the potential for collaborative patient and public involvement in the development, application, evaluation, and interpretation of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). The development of PROMs has followed a well trodden methodological path, with patients contributing as re...

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Published inThe patient : patient-centered outcomes research Vol. 5; no. 2; pp. 79 - 87
Main Authors Staniszewska, Sophie, Haywood, Kirstie L., Brett, Jo, Tutton, Liz
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cham Springer International Publishing 01.06.2012
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Summary:This paper considers the potential for collaborative patient and public involvement in the development, application, evaluation, and interpretation of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). The development of PROMs has followed a well trodden methodological path, with patients contributing as research subjects to the content of many PROMs. This paper argues that the development of PROMs should embrace more collaborative forms of patient and public involvement with patients as research partners in the research process, not just as those individuals who are consulted or as subjects, from whom data are sourced, to ensure the acceptability, relevance, and quality of research. We consider the potential for patients to be involved in a much wider range of methodological activities in PROM development working in partnership with researchers, which we hope will promote paradigmal evolution rather than revolution.
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ISSN:1178-1653
1178-1661
DOI:10.2165/11597150-000000000-00000