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Adaptation of Remote Symptom Monitoring Using Electronic Patient-Reported Outcomes for Implementation in Real-World Settings

Authors :
Gabrielle B. Rocque
D’Ambra N. Dent
Stacey A. Ingram
Nicole E. Caston
Haley B. Thigpen
Fallon R. Lalor
Omer H. Jamy
Smith Giri
Andres Azuero
Jennifer Young Pierce
Chelsea L. McGowen
Casey L. Daniel
Courtney J. Andrews
Chao-Hui Sylvia Huang
J. Nicholas Dionne-Odom
Bryan J. Weiner
Doris Howell
Bradford E. Jackson
Ethan M. Basch
Angela M. Stover
Source :
JCO Oncology Practice. 18:e1943-e1952
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2022.

Abstract

PURPOSE: Despite evidence of clinical benefits, widespread implementation of remote symptom monitoring has been limited. We describe a process of adapting a remote symptom monitoring intervention developed in a research setting to a real-world clinical setting at two cancer centers. METHODS: This formative evaluation assessed core components and adaptations to improve acceptability and fit of remote symptom monitoring using Stirman's Framework for Modifications and Adaptations. Implementation outcomes were evaluated in pilot studies at the two cancer centers testing technology (phase I) and workflow (phase II and III) using electronic health data; qualitative evaluation with semistructured interviews of clinical team members; and capture of field notes from clinical teams and administrators regarding barriers and recommended adaptations for future implementation. RESULTS: Core components of remote symptom monitoring included electronic delivery of surveys with actionable symptoms, patient education on the intervention, a system to monitor survey compliance in real time, the capacity to generate alerts, training nurses to manage alerts, and identification of personnel responsible for managing symptoms. In the pilot studies, while most patients completed > 50% of expected surveys, adaptations were identified to address barriers related to workflow challenges, patient and clinician access to technology, digital health literacy, survey fatigue, alert fatigue, and data visibility. CONCLUSION: Using an implementation science approach, we facilitated adaptation of remote symptom monitoring interventions from the research setting to clinical practice and identified key areas to promote effective uptake and sustainability.

Details

ISSN :
26881535 and 26881527
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JCO Oncology Practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7e7c29b8a1dbfe9394f93e1105274c72