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Social and behavioral domains Paul K. Crane, MD MPH Department of Medicine University of Washington.

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Presentation on theme: "Social and behavioral domains Paul K. Crane, MD MPH Department of Medicine University of Washington."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social and behavioral domains Paul K. Crane, MD MPH Department of Medicine University of Washington

2 Perspective Attending physician, internal medical wards, Harborview Medical Center Measurement expertise, involvement in PROMIS first as part of the Statistical Coordinating Center and now as multiple PI of UW site – I chair the PROMIS’s Clinical Practice Sub-Committee Collaborations with investigators from Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute Researcher, especially with people living with HIV through CNICS (Centers for AIDS Research Network of Integrated Clinical Systems)

3 Social determinants of health Socio-economic status is HUGE – Stable housing – Stable food supply – Safety and capacity for feeling like one has choices Psychiatric co-morbidity is incredibly important Substance use is incredibly important Reliable and safe transportation is incredibly important

4 Measurement and EHRs Cannot assume everyone has access to the internet – Especially those at the very bottom end of the SES spectrum Patient-reported data collection has worked well in CNICS and Cleveland Clinic with an offset clinical day – Interact with a tablet before clinician visit – Data delivered to provider at point of care – Data also valuable for (and sought by) case managers and others in the care delivery team Domains have been dictated by direct clinical utility

5 Routine assessment and chronic care model

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8 Suicide

9 Domain considerations Clinical relevance should drive what gets measured – For most chronic conditions adherence to self management is critical – Factors associated with adherence should be assessed to ensure attention paid to factors related to adherence barriers Suicidality is common among people with chronic disease – Less concern with follow-up if assessed immediately prior to visits

10 Measurement considerations To date we have not found important quantitative differences between PROMIS and legacy scales – Some important difference in content though, such as suicidality – CAT is an efficient means of collecting information Many of the social and behavioral determinants most important to measure are not typical latent traits – Many present / absent type domains, ASSIST, AUDIT, self- reported adherence, etc. – Housing and transportation stability: an area of needed improvement (not currently formally assessed in CNICS, for example) Certainly CAT makes sense for domains with a latent trait

11 Thanks! Appreciate the opportunity to speak with you There are important opportunities to assess patient-reported data routinely to identify factors that may be critically important to successful healthcare delivery


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