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P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center

Focus Area: Supporting Behavioral Change Rigorous quality improvement and outcome reporting within interdisciplinary academic integrative health centers (IHCs) is a realm requiring significant focus in an era of skyrocketing healthcare costs, especially in management of complex chronic illness. In o...

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Autores principales: Morgan, Clinton, Lynn, Misti, Mikhail, Eriny, Bogle, Richard, Elam, Roy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Global Advances in Health and Medicine 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3875088/
http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.097CP.P02.02
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author Morgan, Clinton
Lynn, Misti
Mikhail, Eriny
Bogle, Richard
Elam, Roy
author_facet Morgan, Clinton
Lynn, Misti
Mikhail, Eriny
Bogle, Richard
Elam, Roy
author_sort Morgan, Clinton
collection PubMed
description Focus Area: Supporting Behavioral Change Rigorous quality improvement and outcome reporting within interdisciplinary academic integrative health centers (IHCs) is a realm requiring significant focus in an era of skyrocketing healthcare costs, especially in management of complex chronic illness. In one southeastern US academic IHC seeing primarily (>80%) patients with chronic pain, treatment modalities include yoga, physical therapy (PT), cognitive-based therapy (CBT), acupuncture, and group therapy. A random sample of returning patients at this IHC completed a paper survey querying the following: treatment length and modalities used as a patient at this IHC; current pain, fatigue, and anxiety levels (0–10); change in pain, fatigue, anxiety, and quality of life (−5, “much worse,” to 5, “much better”) since first visit to this IHC. Seventy-seven responses were collected. Mean and median scores were calculated for current pain (m=3.9, SD=2.6, M=4), fatigue (m=4.7, SD=3.0, M=4), anxiety (m=3.5, SD=2.7, M=3), as well as changes in QOL (m=2.8, SD=1.7, M=3), pain (m=2.4, SD=1.9, M=3), anxiety (m=2.4, SD=1.7, M=3), and fatigue (m=1.8, SD=1.7, M=3). Increasing time following treatment was associated with improved QOL (P=.045, r=0.232) as was an increasing number of services utilized (P=.021, r=0.263). Associated with these QOL changes were improved pain (P<.01, r=0.561), fatigue (P<.01, r=0.604), and anxiety (P<0.01, r=0.495) while more severe current pain (P=.002, r=−.347) and fatigue (P=.015, r=−0.277) upon survey completion inversely predicted QOL change. A two-tailed t-test revealed that patients finding PT useful reported improved QOL (P=.008), anxiety (P=.008), fatigue (P=.006), and pain (P=.003) compared to those not. Patients reporting acupuncture useful enjoyed lower anxiety (P=.016) and improved pain (P=.037) while those finding yoga useful reported improved anxiety (P=.005). Together, these data suggest the potential value of implementing a more robust, EMR-based, and consistent evaluation of different treatment modalities and QOL improvement housed within this interdisciplinary academic IHC for quality improvement of personalized, internally coordinated care.
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spelling pubmed-38750882014-01-03 P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center Morgan, Clinton Lynn, Misti Mikhail, Eriny Bogle, Richard Elam, Roy Glob Adv Health Med Scientific Abstracts Focus Area: Supporting Behavioral Change Rigorous quality improvement and outcome reporting within interdisciplinary academic integrative health centers (IHCs) is a realm requiring significant focus in an era of skyrocketing healthcare costs, especially in management of complex chronic illness. In one southeastern US academic IHC seeing primarily (>80%) patients with chronic pain, treatment modalities include yoga, physical therapy (PT), cognitive-based therapy (CBT), acupuncture, and group therapy. A random sample of returning patients at this IHC completed a paper survey querying the following: treatment length and modalities used as a patient at this IHC; current pain, fatigue, and anxiety levels (0–10); change in pain, fatigue, anxiety, and quality of life (−5, “much worse,” to 5, “much better”) since first visit to this IHC. Seventy-seven responses were collected. Mean and median scores were calculated for current pain (m=3.9, SD=2.6, M=4), fatigue (m=4.7, SD=3.0, M=4), anxiety (m=3.5, SD=2.7, M=3), as well as changes in QOL (m=2.8, SD=1.7, M=3), pain (m=2.4, SD=1.9, M=3), anxiety (m=2.4, SD=1.7, M=3), and fatigue (m=1.8, SD=1.7, M=3). Increasing time following treatment was associated with improved QOL (P=.045, r=0.232) as was an increasing number of services utilized (P=.021, r=0.263). Associated with these QOL changes were improved pain (P<.01, r=0.561), fatigue (P<.01, r=0.604), and anxiety (P<0.01, r=0.495) while more severe current pain (P=.002, r=−.347) and fatigue (P=.015, r=−0.277) upon survey completion inversely predicted QOL change. A two-tailed t-test revealed that patients finding PT useful reported improved QOL (P=.008), anxiety (P=.008), fatigue (P=.006), and pain (P=.003) compared to those not. Patients reporting acupuncture useful enjoyed lower anxiety (P=.016) and improved pain (P=.037) while those finding yoga useful reported improved anxiety (P=.005). Together, these data suggest the potential value of implementing a more robust, EMR-based, and consistent evaluation of different treatment modalities and QOL improvement housed within this interdisciplinary academic IHC for quality improvement of personalized, internally coordinated care. Global Advances in Health and Medicine 2013-11 2013-11-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3875088/ http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.097CP.P02.02 Text en © 2013 GAHM LLC. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial- No Derivative 3.0 License, which permits rights to copy, distribute and transmit the work for noncommercial purposes only, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Scientific Abstracts
Morgan, Clinton
Lynn, Misti
Mikhail, Eriny
Bogle, Richard
Elam, Roy
P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title_full P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title_fullStr P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title_full_unstemmed P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title_short P02.02. Quality Improvement Study Suggesting the Value of Point-of-Care Documentation of Quality of Life Vital Signs in an Academic Integrative Health Center
title_sort p02.02. quality improvement study suggesting the value of point-of-care documentation of quality of life vital signs in an academic integrative health center
topic Scientific Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3875088/
http://dx.doi.org/10.7453/gahmj.2013.097CP.P02.02
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