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Clinical Trials/NCT02209246
NCT02209246
Completed
Not Applicable

The Effect of Feedback Regarding Illness Behavior on Patient Satisfaction in Hand Surgery

Massachusetts General Hospital1 site in 1 country128 target enrollmentJuly 2013
ConditionsHand Surgery

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Hand Surgery
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital
Enrollment
128
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
PROMIS CAT Physical Function
Status
Completed
Last Updated
11 years ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The investigators of this study would like to see whether providing feedback to patients regarding their illness behavior/coping strategies, using online questionnaires, improves patient-physician communication in orthopaedic surgery. The investigators aim to enroll 128 patients.

Detailed Description

Psychological and sociological factors are important in the human illness experience, but biomedical factors are the focus of most office visits, particularly in hand surgery. Both patients and surgeons can feel uncomfortable discussing emotions, stress, and coping strategies. Detmar et al. randomized patients in an oncology practice to receive feedback on a HRQL assessment or not during office visits. They observed that feedback on the HRQL assessment contributed to physicians' awareness of healthy issues and patient-physician communication. There was a difference in perceived emotional support, but not in overall satisfaction with the visit\[1\]. A retrospective study observed in patients with local prostate cancer, that pre-therapy HRQL assessment is associated with a better sexual function, sexual bother and bowel function according to post-therapy HRQL scores\[2\]. The investigators propose a two arm unblended, randomized (1:1) controlled trial to assess the effect of providing feedback to patients regarding illness behavior/coping strategies (using Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Computer Adaptive Testing (CAT) instruments) on patient satisfaction and patient-physician communication in orthopaedic surgery. If the results of the study suggest that feedback of results from the questionnaires increases patients' satisfaction, such an intervention may be used in the future to benefit future patients. Aim: The aim of this study is to assess the effect of feedback regarding illness behavior measured with Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Instrument System - Computerized Adaptive Testing (PROMIS- CAT) on patient satisfaction. Primary Null Hypothesis: There is no difference in satisfaction between patients who receive feedback about their illness behavior, measured with PROMIS-CAT, compared to patients who do not. Secondary Null Hypotheses: There is no difference in patient-physician communication about patient's illness behavior between patients who receive feedback about their illness behavior, measured with PROMISCAT, compared to patients who do not. There are no predictors for patient satisfaction.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
July 2013
End Date
July 2014
Last Updated
11 years ago
Study Type
Interventional
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

David C. Ring, MD

Principal Investigator

Massachusetts General Hospital

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • All new patients visiting the Orthopaedic Hand and Upper Extremity Service
  • English fluency and literacy
  • Ability to provide informed consent

Exclusion Criteria

  • age \< 18
  • Inability to complete enrollment forms due to any mental status or language problems (e.g. dementia, head injury, overall illness).

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

PROMIS CAT Physical Function

Time Frame: 1 day

A computerized assessment of physical function measured at enrollment

Medical Interview Satisfaction Scale (MISS-21)

Time Frame: 1 day

Questionnaire

PROMIS CAT Pain Behavior

Time Frame: 1 day

A computerized assessment of pain behavior measured at enrollment

PROMIS CAT Pain Interference

Time Frame: 1 day

A computerized assessment of pain interference measured at enrollment

Secondary Outcomes

  • Patient-physician communication(1 day)

Study Sites (1)

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