
Technological developments enable measuring and using patient-reported outcomes data in orthopaedic clinical practice
Author(s) -
David Hamilton,
Johannes Giesinger,
Karlmeinrad Giesinger
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
world journal of orthopedics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2218-5836
DOI - 10.5312/wjo.v11.i12.584
Subject(s) - medicine , clinical practice , intensive care medicine , medical physics , data science , physical therapy , computer science
Patient-reported outcomes measures form the backbone of outcomes evaluation in orthopaedics, with most of the literature now relying on these scoring tools to measure change in patient health status. This patient-reported information is increasingly collected routinely by orthopaedic providers but use of the data is typically restricted to academic research. Developments in electronic data capture and the outcome tools themselves now allow use of this data as part of the clinical consultation. This review evaluates the role of patient reported outcomes data as a tool to enhance daily orthopaedic clinical practice, and documents how develop-ments in electronic outcome measures, computer-adaptive questionnaire design and instant graphical display of questionnaire can facilitate enhanced patient-clinician shared decision making.