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Overview of PainTracker Progress to-date at UW Medicine

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Presentation on theme: "Overview of PainTracker Progress to-date at UW Medicine"— Presentation transcript:

1 Overview of PainTracker Progress to-date at UW Medicine
& Progress to-date at UW Medicine Brian Theodore, PhD Mark Sullivan, MD, PhD David Tauben, MD

2 What is PainTracker? The UW PainTracker is a web-based tool to assess and graph core patient-reported outcomes of chronic pain management over time. Its purpose is to provide a brief visual display of the relationship between chronic pain treatments and these outcomes, such as pain, function, mood, sleep, and treatment satisfaction. Computerized Patient Reported Outcomes (cPRO) platform and web application developed by the UW Center for Informatics Research Group and UW Division of Pain Medicine.

3 Who is Using PainTracker?
Clinical Services Date of Adoption Early-Adopters UW Neighborhood Clinics July 2011* UW TelePain July 2012** Sports Medicine at Husky Stadium April 2014 Center for Pain Relief July 2014 HMC Pain Relief Service Q – Q (est.) Planned Expansions (Planned rollout 2015 – 2016) Bone & Joint Surgery Center/Rheumatology Neurology & Headache Clinic Pelvic Pain Clinic Other internal & external partners * Not web-based. EPIC SmartSet and Note Template. ** Started paper-forms, migrated to web-based in Q

4 Common Core, Multiple Versions
Common web application designed to support multiple modalities and uses: UW PainTracker initially supported primary care content and workflow, and also TelePain Content added to support sports medicine and ortho needs and rebranded “UW ActionTracker” Content added to support chronic pain at CPR

5 Core Measures Pain location
PEG – Pain Intensity, Interference with Enjoyment of Life and Interference with General Activity Pain interference with sleep initiation and maintenance Pain interference with patient-defined “Most Important Activity” PHQ 4 – Mood screener for depression & anxiety Opioid Risk Tool Medication tracking Prescription opioid dose (MED) and utilization Satisfaction with Pain Treatment

6 Service-Specific Measures
PainTracker – Sports Medicine “Action Tracker” PainTracker CPR Function Oswestry Disability Index Other location-specific measures (e.g., NDI, FADI, QuickDASH) Alcohol Screener AUDIT-C Treatment Tracking PT, Injections, Surgeries, Behavioral Medicine Mood Screeners PHQ-9 GAD-7 PC-PTSD Additional Opioid Use Screener PODS Sleep Apnea STOP-BANG Global Quality of Life PROMIS Global Health

7 User Interface

8 Clinical Report PainTracker

9 Clinical Report PainTracker
Content in table below graphs: Days per month excess meds Important activity selected Prior treatment history Item responses to selected questionnaires

10 Challenges Integration with Epic Labor intensive Completion rates
Access to dataset

11 Workflow Analysis In collaboration with UW Department of Human Centered Design & Engineering

12 Progress with Integration
Epic Scheduling Pain Tracker Daily Activity Report PSS/Outcomes Coordinator Reminder Calls

13 Progress with Completion Rates
Baseline: 131 patients observed over 7 weeks at CPR Followup: 163 patients observed over 7 weeks at CPR

14 Progress with Completion Rates

15 Progress with Completion Rates (single clinic champion)
128 patients observed over 8 weeks at CPR

16 Progress with Data Access
Current development of flat file with raw and summary scores (Est. Dec 2014/Jan 2015) On-demand download into Excel file Available on-demand for QI Available for research with IRB approval

17 Questions?


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