Author: Baker, Edward; Battle, Ceri; Banjeri, Abhishek; Carlton, Edward; Dixon, Christine; Ferry, Jennifer; Hopkins, Philip; Jones, Robert; Murrells, Trevor; Norton, Christine; Patient, Lee; Rasheed, Ashraf; Skene, Imogen; Tabner, Andrew; Tunnicliff, Malcolm; Young, Louise; Xyrichis, Andreas; Lee, Gerry
Title: Prospective observational study to examine health-related quality of life and develop models to predict long-term patient-reported outcomes 6 months after hospital discharge with blunt thoracic injuries Cord-id: 1s407z5n Document date: 2021_7_8
ID: 1s407z5n
Snippet: OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine the long-term outcomes and health-related quality of life in patients with blunt thoracic injuries over 6 months from hospital discharge and develop models to predict long-term patient-reported outcomes. DESIGN: A prospective observational study using longitudinal survey design. SETTING: The study recruitment was undertaken at 12 UK hospitals which represented diverse geographical locations and covered urban, suburban and rural areas across England and Wale
Document: OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine the long-term outcomes and health-related quality of life in patients with blunt thoracic injuries over 6 months from hospital discharge and develop models to predict long-term patient-reported outcomes. DESIGN: A prospective observational study using longitudinal survey design. SETTING: The study recruitment was undertaken at 12 UK hospitals which represented diverse geographical locations and covered urban, suburban and rural areas across England and Wales. PARTICIPANTS: 337 patients admitted to hospital with blunt thoracic injuries were recruited between June 2018–October 2020. METHODS: Participants completed a bank of two quality of life surveys (Short Form-12 (SF-12) and EuroQol 5-Dimensions 5-Levels) and two pain questionnaires (Brief Pain Inventory and painDETECT Questionnaire) at four time points over the first 6 months after discharge from hospital. A total of 211 (63%) participants completed the outcomes data at 6 months after hospital discharge. OUTCOMES MEASURES: Three outcomes were measured using pre-existing and validated patient-reported outcome measures. Outcomes included: Poor physical function (SF-12 Physical Component Score); chronic pain (Brief Pain Inventory Pain Severity Score); and neuropathic pain (painDETECT Questionnaire). RESULTS: Despite a trend towards improving physical functional and pain at 6 months, outcomes did not return to participants perceived baseline level of function. At 6 months after hospital discharge, 37% (n=77) of participants reported poor physical function; 36.5% (n=77) reported a chronic pain state; and 22% (n=47) reported pain with a neuropathic component. Predictive models were developed for each outcome highlighting important data collection requirements for predicting long-term outcomes in this population. Model diagnostics including calibration and discrimination statistics suggested good model fit in this development cohort. CONCLUSIONS: This study identified the recovery trajectories for patients with blunt thoracic injuries over the first 6 months after hospital discharge and present prognostic models for three important outcomes which after external validation could be used as clinical risk stratification scores.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- acute admission and logistic regression analysis: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
- acute admission and logistic regression model: 1, 2
- acute admission and long term outcome: 1
- acute hospital admission and logistic regression: 1, 2, 3, 4
- acute hospital admission and logistic regression analysis: 1
- logistic regression analysis and long term outcome: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5
- logistic regression and long term outcome: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
- logistic regression model and long term outcome: 1, 2, 3
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date