Skip to main content
Erschienen in: BMC Geriatrics 1/2018

Open Access 01.12.2018 | Research Article

Standard set of health outcome measures for older persons

verfasst von: Asangaedem Akpan, Charlotte Roberts, Karen Bandeen-Roche, Barbara Batty, Claudia Bausewein, Diane Bell, David Bramley, Julie Bynum, Ian D. Cameron, Liang-Kung Chen, Anne Ekdahl, Arnold Fertig, Tom Gentry, Marleen Harkes, Donna Haslehurst, Jonathon Hope, Diana Rodriguez Hurtado, Helen Lyndon, Joanne Lynn, Mike Martin, Ruthe Isden, Francesco Mattace Raso, Sheila Shaibu, Jenny Shand, Cathie Sherrington, Samir Sinha, Gill Turner, Nienke De Vries, George Jia-Chyi Yi, John Young, Jay Banerjee

Erschienen in: BMC Geriatrics | Ausgabe 1/2018

Abstract

Background

The International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) was founded in 2012 to propose consensus-based measurement tools and documentation for different conditions and populations.This article describes how the ICHOM Older Person Working Group followed a consensus-driven modified Delphi technique to develop multiple global outcome measures in older persons.
The standard set of outcome measures developed by this group will support the ability of healthcare systems to improve their care pathways and quality of care. An additional benefit will be the opportunity to compare variations in outcomes which encourages and supports learning between different health care systems that drives quality improvement. These outcome measures were not developed for use in research. They are aimed at non researchers in healthcare provision and those who pay for these services.

Methods

A modified Delphi technique utilising a value based healthcare framework was applied by an international panel to arrive at consensus decisions.To inform the panel meetings, information was sought from literature reviews, longitudinal ageing surveys and a focus group.

Results

The outcome measures developed and recommended were participation in decision making, autonomy and control, mood and emotional health, loneliness and isolation, pain, activities of daily living, frailty, time spent in hospital, overall survival, carer burden, polypharmacy, falls and place of death mapped to a three tier value based healthcare framework.

Conclusions

The first global health standard set of outcome measures in older persons has been developed to enable health care systems improve the quality of care provided to older persons.
Hinweise

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (https://​doi.​org/​10.​1186/​s12877-017-0701-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Abkürzungen
ASCOT
Adult social care outcomes toolkit
CSHACFS
Canadian study of health and ageing clinical frailty scale
ICHOM
International consortium for health outcomes measurement
OP
Older people
SF36
Short form (36) health survey
UCLA
University of California, Los Angeles
WG
Working Group
ZBI
Zarit burden interview

Background

The number of older people and their life expectancy has been rising steadily ranging from 50 years in resource poor to 83 years in resource rich regions [1]. Older people commonly have more than one chronic condition and have frequent encounters with healthcare providers [2]. Provision of care can be fragmented due to multiple assessments and treatments [3]. While focusing on a single condition may have advantages, a holistic approach with a review of outcomes that matter has greater value. Variation in outcomes of healthcare is a global challenge [4] and having the proposed set of outcome measures will facilitate and support reducing this variation.
Understanding what outcomes matter to patients would be valuable to clinicians and policymakers in aligning health care services to their needs. The aim of this project was to define a minimum set of outcomes for evaluating healthcare for older people. A Delphi technique was used to develop a balanced score card that was feasible to implement in routine clinical practice. An additional goal was to facilitate the creation of databases that can be compared and/or merged for analysis. This would support decision making being shared between providers, facilitate quality improvement and allow for benchmarking across organisations and countries.
The lack of outcome measurements that matter most to patients represents a barrier to health care improvement [5] and means providers have little information on which to judge the effectiveness of interventions. The ICHOM has to date developed 13 standard sets of outcome measures [6] and by 2017 at least 50% of the global disease burden will be covered. ICHOM (www.​ICHOM.​org) was founded in 2012 to promote value-based health care by defining global standard sets of outcome measures that matter to patients and promote adoption of these measures worldwide. This would be ICHOM’s first standard set of outcomes for a population as opposed to a specific condition such as cataracts, dementia or lung cancer [6].
ICHOM is a non-profit organisation supported by the Harvard Business School, Boston Consulting Group and the Karolinska Institute to transform health care systems worldwide by measuring and reporting patient outcomes in a standardised way. ICHOM organises global teams of physician leaders, outcomes researchers and patient advocates to define Standard Sets of outcomes per medical condition, and then drives adoption to enable health care providers globally to compare, learn, and improveA working group (WG) was organised by ICHOM, to represent a wide clinical, scientific and cultural background. Members (n = 31) included patient representatives, measurement experts, clinical, social and psychological researchers. Countries represented included Australia, Botswana, Canada, Germany, The Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Peru, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America.

Method

A modified Delphi technique was used to develop the standard set. The Delphi technique is an iterative, multistage process to actively transform opinion into group consensus [7]. Over a period of 10 months, the working group met eight times over teleconferences.
The goals and scope of the working group were discussed in the first teleconference. The second to fourth teleconferences (call 1 to 3 in Fig. 1) focused on the outcome domains and definitions to include in the standard set. In preparation for teleconferences 2–4, the working group were provided with information from literature reviews (Additional file 1: Table S1) and an older person’s and carer focus groups (Table 1). ICHOM organised an older people focus group with six attendees (age range 68–89) after the working group launch, to obtain their perspectives, using open-ended questions. Participants, consulted through Age UK’s networks, discussed which outcomes were of greatest importance to them. Age UK (http://​www.​ageuk.​org.​uk) is a charity dedicated to improving the lives of older people via a national network supported and facilitated by partnerships.
Table 1
Themes from the older persons and carer focus group
Amongst many discussed, the groups felt the following were most important:
However, there were a few new topics and points to consider:
• Social and community participation
• Independence and remaining in own home
• Quality of life and wellbeing
• Avoiding inappropriate discharges and readmissions
• Isolation
• Loneliness and friendship
• Physical disabilities – hearing, vision, continence, mobility
• Hobbies and activities
• Access to 24 h healthcare and social services
• Avoiding falls
• Delaying frailty
• Care and respite for the carer
• Malnutrition, weight loss and appetite
• Physical symptom burden
• Pain
• Sleep quality
• Survival/mortality was seen as being less important than other outcomes – instead seen as inevitable and expected
• Role in society e.g. formal/informal job or volunteering
• Consistency of medical service/single coordinator of care
To support the decision making process the working group used a set of 4 criteria; represent the end results or ‘outcomes’ of care, represent what is important to OP and their families, feasible to capture and can be used for quality improvement programmes.
The discussion content was collated into online surveys. Working group members were asked to submit their feedback and votes via a web survey questionnaire. The survey had all the outcomes discussed with the level of agreement ranked during the teleconferences. Decisions resulting from the surveys required a minimum 50% of the working group membership participation. It was anticipated that due to time zone differences and schedules, this was a practical and reasonable standard to adopt given a fixed deadline by which the work had to be completed.
Teleconferences 5 and 6 (calls 4 and 5 Fig. 1) addressed case mix factors and definitions. Teleconferences 7 and 8 (calls 6 and 7 Fig. 1) focused on reviewing the agreed outcome domains, case mix factors and how the standard set would be shared with the healthcare community. Over the 10 months of the project, attendance for the teleconference meetings ranged between 51.7% to 75.9% (mean 61.1%). Three voting surveys were conducted with varying response rates. For a measure to be accepted as an outcome the working group set a standard of 70% and above of members voting to include a measure as an outcome.The final standard set was approved by all members of the working group.
PRISMA reporting principles were used as guidance for the literature search strategy [8]. Titles, keywords and abstracts were searched using MeSH or equivalent terms in the following databases PubMed/Medline, EMBASE, Psychinfo, Social Care online, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), COCHRANE, PsychInfo. Inclusion criteria included: (Aged, 80 and over OR Frail elderly or Comorbidity) AND (quality of life OR outcome assessment (healthcare) OR quality indicators), Paper and guidelines reporting on patient-reported and patient-centred outcomes, English language abstracts, reviews and randomised controlled trial,2005 onwards. Exclusion criteria included Non-English language, irretrievable, insufficient outcome data, unclear diagnoses, unvalidated outcomes.
Additional sources of information included existing measurement approaches adopted by longitudinal ageing surveys [938]. Figure 1 summarises the working group process.
Triangulating findings from the literature review and focus group with the working group discussions would strengthen the resultant outcome measures decided upon and highlight the key issues that most matter to older people. Experience of and satisfaction with care by older people and their carers including distress and mood was noted in quality of life literature reviews but did not come up specifically in the focus group discussions.
A three tiered hierarchy framework [39] has been utilised to categorise the outcome measures. Tier 1 is the health status achieved or retained with survival and then degree of recovery achieved. Tier 2 is the process of recovery with time to recovery and return to normal activities as well as the treatment burden such as side effects and complications.Tier 3 is sustainability of health with recurrences and long term consequences of care interventions.
A specific cut off age was considered inappropriate due to the range in life expectancies around the world. During the working group discussions, it was agreed that the last 10 years of life captured a period in which a person might be regarded as being old across the world and potentially seeking healthcare. Therefore, rather than specifying a fixed cut-off age as the inclusion population for this standard set, the working group recommended subtracting 10 years from the estimated life expectancy at 60 years in each country or region. The inclusion population would be those who are at or above this age. For example, in South Africa, the life expectancy at age 60 is 76 years old, therefore the inclusion population would be all those over the age of 66 [4043]. These can be utilised for any society in the world where a particular age is viewed as old if it does not fall within the definition above. The principles that apply to older people would be the same. This respects and accepts that each society can define what old age is to them.

Results

The suggested initial outcomes were chosen based on congruency across findings from the registries, surveys, literature searches and engagement with older people. A minority were chosen based on the consensus experience of the working group members. In the general category health status, quality of life, mortality, independence, remaining at home, carer health, and autonomy were deemed essential. In physical health, functional status, symptom occurrence, sleep, harm, frailty stage, nutrition, weight loss was also essential. Mental and psychological health had cognition, mood and loneliness as essential. Social network, support and isolation were essential in the social and community category. Length of stay, care coordination and discharge to place of choice were essential in healthcare utilisation. Dignity, shared decision making, access to information and advice were deemed essential under the experience/process category.
Tier 1 outcomes were overall survival, frailty and place of death. Tier 2 outcomes were polypharmacy, falls, participation in decision making and time spent in hospital. Tier 3 outcomes included loneliness and isolation, activities of daily living, pain, mood and emotional health, autonomy and control and carer burden. The results of the voting outcomes are summarised in Tables 2, 3, 4 and 5 summarises the outcome measures mapped to the tiers.
Table 2
Showing voting outcomes following round 1 survey of working group members. The % refers to the proportion of those who voted in support of each item
Round 1
Percent
Include
 Frailty
85
 Overall health-related quality of life and wellbeing
100
 Overall health status (self-reported)
96
 Overall satisfaction with life (self-reported)
85
 Physical functioning and disability (general)
88
 General mobility
85
 Social functioning
85
 Carer quality of life and wellbeing
88
 Carer depression
73
 Cognitive functioning
100
 Mental, psychological and emotional health
96
 Independence
100
 Ability to remain in own home
88
 Carer health (general)
73
 ADLs
96
 Change in health status (self-reported)
88
 Autonomy and control over daily life
100
 Level of physical activity
81
 Gait speed
81
 Place of death
73
 Place of death as preferred
73
 Confusion/delirium
81
 Isolation and loneliness
88
 Mood
96
 Anxiety
81
 Overall burden of all other symptoms
77
 Depression
81
 Frequency of activity participation
73
 Social/community engagement or participation
81
 Confidence in ability to cope with own health problems
88
 Experience of having been treated with dignity and respect
85
 Confidence in role as participant in care
77
 Other patient activation measures
73
 Confidence in healthcare professionals
73
 Hospital admissions
77
 Hospital readmissions
85
 Length of stay (hospital/rehab/nursing home/other)
77
 Discharged to place of choice
77
 Coordination of care
77
Inconclusive
 Functional mobility
58
 Pain
58
 Confidence in ability to access information and advice when needed
63
 Confidence in ability to access appropriate healthcare
68
 Feeling safe (generally)
68
 Confidence in understanding of own health
58
 Falls resulting in a fracture
58
 Overall survival
68
Excluded
 Cause-specific survival
27
 Blood pressure
15
 Waist and hip circumference
8
 Heart rate
15
 Bone density
15
 Lung function
12
 Peak flow
8
 Aortic calcification
12
 Carotid intima-media thicknes
8
 Standing and sitting height
12
 Lean muscle mass and body composition
23
 Condition-specific outcomes
15
 Ability to work (formal/informal)
46
 Dynamic balance
38
 Static balance
38
 Lower-limb strength
38
 Grip strength
38
 Oral health
42
 Sleep quality
38
 Weight loss
42
 Appetite loss
42
 Stiffness
27
 Fatigue
46
 Medication adherence
46
Table 3
Showing voting outcomes following round 2 survey of working group members. The % refers to the proportion of those who voted in support of each item
Round 2
Percent
Include
 Functional mobility
77
 Pain
72
 Falls resulting in a fracture
77
Inconclusive
 Confidence in ability to access information and advice when needed
50
 Confidence in ability to access appropriate healthcare
64
 Feeling safe (generally)
59
 Confidence in understanding of own health
55
 Overall survival
59
 Overall burden of all physical symptoms
59
 Continence
64
 General experience of healthcare
55
 Contact with healthcare (emergency service/doctor/nurse/outpatient clinic)
50
 Pressure ulcers
50
 Complications from treatment
59
 Adverse medication effects
55
 Falls resulting in seeking medical attention
59
Excluded
 Other palliative care specific outcomes
41
 Relationships
68
 Vision
45
 Hearing
41
 Sit to stand speed
36
 Number of falls
68
 Falls resulting in an admission to hospital
68
Table 4
Showing voting outcomes following round 3 survey of working group members. The % refers to the proportion of those who voted in support of each item
Round 3
Percent
Include
 Overall survival
71
 Falls resulting in seeking medical attention
71
 Polypharmacy (added in the third round)
75
Inconclusive
 Confidence in ability to access information and advice when needed
54
 Confidence in ability to access appropriate healthcare
63
 Confidence in understanding of own health
58
 Complications from treatment
54
Excluded
 Feeling safe (generally)
42
 Feeling safe within a healthcare organisation (added in the third round)
38
 Overall burden of all physical symptoms
46
 Continence
38
 General experience of healthcare
29
 Contact with healthcare (emergency service/doctor/nurse/outpatient clinic)
38
 Pressure ulcers
46
 Adverse medication effects
46
Table 5
Standard Set of Outcome Domains for Older People
Tiers
Outcome Domains
Supporting Information
Suggested Data Sources
Tier 1
Overall Survival
All cause survival
Administartive data
Place of Death
Whether a preferred place to die has been expressed, the patient died in their usual place of residence and whether they died in their preferred place of death (if previously expressed)
Clinical data
Frailty
Tracked via the Canadian Study on Health & Aging Clinical Frailty Scale
Clinical data
Tier 2
PolypharmacyS190-191
Includes the total number of prescribed medications, adverse drug events and whether medications make the patient unwell
Clinical data, Patient reported
FallsS192
How many falls has the patient sustained in the last 12 months and how many falls have resulted in a fracture, need for any professional medical attention and hospitalization
Clinical data, Patient reported
Particiapation in decision making
Includes confidence in; ability to cope with own health, role as participant in care (involved in discussions, planning) and healthcare professionals. Also includes the experience of having been treated with dignity and respect, coordination of care and discharge to place of choice
Patient reported
Time spent in hospital
Number of hospital admissions, readmissions and total time spent in hospital over a year
Administrative data
Tier 3
Loneliness and isolation S193
Tracked via the UCLA- 3-item scale
Patient reported
Activities of daily livingS194-195
Includes mobility and limitations to activities of daily living and tracked via the SF-36 and gait speed
Clinical data, Patient reported
PainS196
Tracked via the SF-36
Patient reported
Mood and emotional healthS197
Tracked via the SF-36
Patient reported
Autonomy and controlS198
How much control the patient has over their daily life tracked via the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit
Patient reported
Carer burdenS199
Carer reported burden tracked via the 4-item screening Zarit Burden Interview
Carer reported
Key to Table 5
UCLA University of California, Los Angeles -3 Item Scale [59]
SF36 Short Form (36) Health Survey [60]
ASCOT Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit [61]
ZBI Zarit Burden Interview [62]
CSHACFS Canadian Study of Health and Ageing Clinical Frailty Scale [63]
Polypharmacy
S190. Tjia J, Velten SJ, Parsons C et al. Studies to reduce unnecessary medication use in frail older adults: a systematic review. Drugs Aging 2013;30(5):285-307
S191. Shrank WH, Polinski JM, Avorn J. Quality indicators for medication use in vulnerable elders. J Am Geriatr Soc 2007;55 Suppl 2: S373-82
Falls
S192. Chang JT, Ganz DA. Quality indicators for falls and mobility problems in vulnerable elders. J Am Geriatr Soc 2007;55 Suppl 2: S327-34
Loneliness and isolation
S193. Hughes ME, Waite LJ, Hawkley LC et al. A short scale for measuring loneliness in large surveys: Results from two population-based studies. Res Aging 2004;26(6):655–672
Activities of daily living
S194. 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Available at http://www.rand.org/health/surveys_tools/mos/36-item-short-form.html Accessed on the 13 November 2016
S7195. Peel NM, Kuys SS, Klein K. Gait speed as a measure in geriatric assessment in clinical settings: a systematic review. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci 2013;68(1):39-46
Pain
S196. 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Available at http://www.rand.org/health/surveys_tools/mos/36-item-short-form.html Accessed on the 13 November 2016
Mood and emotional health
S197. 36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36). Available at: http://​www.​rand.​org/​health/​surveys_​tools/​mos/​36-item-short-form.​html Accessed on the 13 November 2016
Autonomy and control
S198. Available at: http://​www.​pssru40.​org.​uk/​ascot Accessed on the 13 November 2016
Carer burden
S199. Bedard M, Molloy DW, Squire L et al. The Zarit Burden Interview: a new short version and screening version. Gerontologist 2001;41: 652-657
The collection of a minimum set of baseline characteristics is recommended to allow case-mix adjustments [44, 45] Case-mix adjustment is a useful and fair way for making comparisons among health care providers. Taking these into consideration reduces disadvantages in comparative ratings due to differences in the underlying population of interest.
The working group agreed:
a)
Demographic factors: Such as age, gender, level of education, living arrangements, marital status and ethnicity. Items are harmonised to other ICHOM surveys. The educational level should be assessed following the International Standard Classification of Education [46] to allow global comparisons.
 
b)
Condition specific variables: These were frailty stage, type of medication used, total number of medications and baseline cognition.
 
c)
Systemic variables: Included were co-morbidities, smoking, alcohol use, weight, height, body mass index, vision and hearing impairment, and baseline activities of daily living.
 
A reference guide is freely available online that further describes the recommended instruments, data sources and provides detailed information (www.​ichom.​org).

Discussion

A standard set of outcome measures that matter to older people has been developed by a global panel of interdisciplinary professionals,older people and their carers.
The strengths of this project include the global interdisciplinary collaboration, involving older people and their carers and triangulating findings from a focus group, professional experience and the published literature. Obtaining information from various sources was important as not surprisingly not all domains were articulated in the single focus group due to its small sample. This also focused on a subset of a population rather than on a specific medical condition. To date no other set of outcome measures for older people has been developed using this approach. This approach has reduced the chances of excluding important themes that matter to older people. In attempting to be comprehensive and for the findings to be feasible for implementation, some themes had to be excluded. This does not mean they are not important but feasibility of the outcomes being used was regarded by the working group to be critical. The outcome measures have not been developed for use by academic researchers and will therefore not meet criteria for use by that group. The measures have been specifically developed for practical use by healthcare providers and those who pay for these services.
The framework utilised to develop these outcomes is based on Porter’s outcome hierarchy [39]. Tier 1 is the most important with the outcome being survival or the best possible state achieved for a condition. Tier 2 outcomes are the issues related to achieving tier 1 outcomes such as the time to recovery from a flare up of a chronic disease or recovery from an acute disease. Included in this tier 2 are all the harms associated with investigations and treatment. Tier 3 outcomes relate to long term health status.
Healthcare providers should appreciate and understand the perception, attitude and behaviour of those they care for [47]. In this context, “what matters to you” as a recipient of healthcare is more important than “what is the matter with you.” We have attempted to balance the information derived from previous studies to compensate for this by incorporating the views of OP and their carers. We hope that whilst not ideal, concerted efforts were made to ensure that the voice of OP and their carers were incorporated.
The value of performance based measures including grip strength as health outcomes for older adults [48] was discussed. The evidence base supporting the value of such measures for providing integrative assessments of older persons’ health, and for identifying persons at risk of a decline in health was recognized. The majority of the group considered the collection of such measures burdensome as part of a minimum set of indicators to be included in the standard set but endorse the value of incorporating them in specialty geriatric settings.
Frailty is well recognised [49, 50]. For providers, understanding the proportion of those becoming frail will aid their future resource allocation, service planning and prevention strategies [51, 52]. There was agreement for a frailty measure as a risk factor for outcome measure adjustment but much less agreement concerning the role of a frailty measure as a service outcome. Indeed, this was the most discussed topic.While the phenotype model [53] remains the gold standard for diagnosing frailty, the cumulative deficit model [54] was viewed by a majority as what clinicians will identify with more easily. Both have been validated in aiding clinical decision making [48, 55] and [56]. The Canadian Study of Health and Ageing (CSHA) Clinical Frailty Scale [43] was recommended as the tool to be used in the standard set to assess frailty. It mirrors clinical judgement, is objective [57] and can be used in places with no electronic health records. However, alternative frailty tools may become widely implemented in some countries. For example, an electronic frailty index is now available for use for over 90% of general practitioners in England [58] (http://​ageing.​oxfordjournals.​org/​content/​early/​2016/​03/​03/​ageing.​afw039.​full) and, an online tool (www.​johnshopkinssolu​tions.​com/​solution/​frailty) is available for frailty assessment utilising the phenotype model.
At first glance, polypharmacy, falls and length of stay in hospital may not appear to be outcome measures. This is where triangulation of findings from focus group and the working group discussions added value to this project. These three areas were things that mattered to older people, their carers and clinicians. It was felt that without keeping track of these in the form of outcome measures it could easily fall off the radar of health systems caring for older people. The SF-36 and other tools to capture the metrics around the outcome measures were chosen solely for very practical reasons. It had to be free to use and cover as many of the outcome measures to reduce the number of tools and complexity of use associated with this.
The final set of outcome measures arrived at has been reduced down from the original set at the outset of the project. In settling for a cut off, the working group applied feasibility and comprehensiveness as a guiding principle. In using such a diverse group, it is hoped that a reasonable balance has been struck.
The working group consensus was to measure the standard set outcomes longitudinally over time. A minimum annual frequency was recommended given the challenges of measurement and capturing population level changes. It was acknowledged that while some stakeholders might be interested and keen to collect these data more frequently and / or at each healthcare encounter, to recommend more than an annual collection could be too prescriptive and burdensome for providers.
This was an ambitious project and the working group recognised that it was unlikely to satisfy everyone. This is however a good starting point and further outcome measures should be explored and developed for specific niche groups such as older people with frailty, cognitive impairment, physical disability as well as exploring outcome measures that would be relevant for carers and researchers in old age health. Furthermore as these outcome measures start being used, areas for improveing them would arise and allow for them to be amended continuously to make them relevant and fit for purpose as our healthcare environment continues to change.

Conclusion

Through the efforts reported in this paper, the ICHOM older people working group defined a standard set of recommended outcome measures that matter to older people. This is a first effort towards a standardisation of outcome measures to improve the quality of care for older people. Much further work remains to be done but in the meantime, itwould be ideal for national data sets to include information which allows these outcomes to be derived routinely.

Acknowledgments

Matt Salt, BSc MPH, Standardisation Associate ICHOM.
For formatting the Tables and references.

Funding

NHS England funded ICHOM to carry out this study. NHS England as an organisation was not involved in the design of the study, collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript. However please note a representative DB was a member of the working group but the final outputs reflected the overall working group’s views.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets generated and a reference guide are freely available on the ICHOM Older People website, http://​www.​ichom.​org/​medical-conditions/​older-person/​
This research did not require ethical approval in 2015 when this was done using the MRC ethics decision-assistance tool and complies with national guidelines of Health Research Authority at: https://​www.​hra.​nhs.​uk/​planning-and-improving-research/​research-planning/​access-study-support-advice-services/​
Written consent to participate in the focus group was obtained.
All authors have given their consent for this manuscript to be published.

Competing interests

AA – received a honorarium as a research fellow for ICHOM and paid travel/accommodation/registration for ICHOM conference.
CR, KB, BB, CB: declares that they have no competing interests.
DB reports her commercial contract role within strategic consultancy whose primary aim is to see outcomes used more frequently as the currency to improve value in the NHS. She is therefore contracted to work with various health economies, including for some that are working on contracts for older people. No other reported conflicts of interest.
DB: Representative of NHS England.
JB: No reported conflicts of interest.
IC: reports receiving salary support from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. Member of the editorial board of BMC Geriatrics.
LC: Member of the editorial board of BMC Geriatrics .
AE, AF, TG, MH, DH, JH, RI, DRH, HL, JL, MM, FMR, SS, JS: declares that they have no competing interests.
CS reports receiving salary support from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia. No other reported conflicts of interest.
SS, GT, NV, GJY, JY, JB: declares that they have no competing interests.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://​creativecommons.​org/​publicdomain/​zero/​1.​0/​) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Literatur
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Banerjee S. Multimorbidity: older adults need health care that can count past one. Lancet. 2014;385:587–9.CrossRefPubMed Banerjee S. Multimorbidity: older adults need health care that can count past one. Lancet. 2014;385:587–9.CrossRefPubMed
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Makary MA. How health care's successes became distractions. Health Affairs (Millwood). 2014;33:1311–3.CrossRef Makary MA. How health care's successes became distractions. Health Affairs (Millwood). 2014;33:1311–3.CrossRef
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Drouin H, Walker J, McNeil H, et al. Measured outcomes of chronic care programs for older adults: a systematic review. BMC Geriatr. 2015;15:139–48.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Drouin H, Walker J, McNeil H, et al. Measured outcomes of chronic care programs for older adults: a systematic review. BMC Geriatr. 2015;15:139–48.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
7.
Zurück zum Zitat Boulkedid R, Abdoul H, Loustau M, et al. Using and reporting the Delphi method for selecting healthcare quality indicators: a systematic review. Wright JM, ed. PLoS One. 2011;6(6):e20476.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Boulkedid R, Abdoul H, Loustau M, et al. Using and reporting the Delphi method for selecting healthcare quality indicators: a systematic review. Wright JM, ed. PLoS One. 2011;6(6):e20476.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Liberati A, Altman DG, Tetzlaff J, et al. The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration. BMJ. 2009;339:b2700.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Liberati A, Altman DG, Tetzlaff J, et al. The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration. BMJ. 2009;339:b2700.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Taylor JO, Wallace RB, Ostfeld AM et al. Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly, 1981–1993: [East Boston, Massachusetts, Iowa and Washington Counties, Iowa, New Haven, Connecticut, and North Central North Carolina] Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Available at: http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/NACDA/studies/9915. Accessed 17 June 2016. Taylor JO, Wallace RB, Ostfeld AM et al. Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly, 1981–1993: [East Boston, Massachusetts, Iowa and Washington Counties, Iowa, New Haven, Connecticut, and North Central North Carolina] Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR). Available at: http://​www.​icpsr.​umich.​edu/​icpsrweb/​NACDA/​studies/​9915. Accessed 17 June 2016.
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Guralnik JM, Fried LP, Simonsick EM, et al. The Women’s Health and Aging Study: Health and Social Characteristics of Older Women With Disability. Bethesda, MD: National Institute on Aging; 1995. NIH Publication 95–4009:009–018 Guralnik JM, Fried LP, Simonsick EM, et al. The Women’s Health and Aging Study: Health and Social Characteristics of Older Women With Disability. Bethesda, MD: National Institute on Aging; 1995. NIH Publication 95–4009:009–018
29.
Zurück zum Zitat The Older Persons and Informal Caregivers Survey Minimal Dataset, Netherlands (TOPICS-MDS). Available at: http://topics-mds.eu. Accessed 15 Apr 2016. The Older Persons and Informal Caregivers Survey Minimal Dataset, Netherlands (TOPICS-MDS). Available at: http://​topics-mds.​eu. Accessed 15 Apr 2016.
44.
Zurück zum Zitat Miner L, Bolding P, Hilbe J et al. Practical predictive analytics and Decisioning Systems for Medicine, 1st Edition. London: Elsevier; 2014. Miner L, Bolding P, Hilbe J et al. Practical predictive analytics and Decisioning Systems for Medicine, 1st Edition. London: Elsevier; 2014.
45.
Zurück zum Zitat O'Malley AJ, Zaslavsky AM, Elliott MN, Zaborski L, Cleary PD. Case-mix adjustment of the CAHPS® hospital survey. Health Serv Res. 2005;40:2162–81.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral O'Malley AJ, Zaslavsky AM, Elliott MN, Zaborski L, Cleary PD. Case-mix adjustment of the CAHPS® hospital survey. Health Serv Res. 2005;40:2162–81.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
47.
Zurück zum Zitat Allsop J. Competing Paradigms and Health Research: Design and Process. In Researching Health: Qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods. 2nd edition. Saks M & Allsop J (Eds). Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications; 2013. Allsop J. Competing Paradigms and Health Research: Design and Process. In Researching Health: Qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods. 2nd edition. Saks M & Allsop J (Eds). Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications; 2013.
48.
Zurück zum Zitat Bandeen-Roche K, Xue Q, Ferrucci L, et al. Phenotype of frailty: characterization in the Women's health and aging studies. J Gerontol Ser A Biol Med Sci. 2006;61:262–6.CrossRef Bandeen-Roche K, Xue Q, Ferrucci L, et al. Phenotype of frailty: characterization in the Women's health and aging studies. J Gerontol Ser A Biol Med Sci. 2006;61:262–6.CrossRef
49.
50.
Zurück zum Zitat Turner G, Clegg A. Best practice guidelines for the management of frailty: a British geriatrics society, age UK and Royal College of general practitioners report. Age Ageing. 2014;43:744–7.CrossRefPubMed Turner G, Clegg A. Best practice guidelines for the management of frailty: a British geriatrics society, age UK and Royal College of general practitioners report. Age Ageing. 2014;43:744–7.CrossRefPubMed
52.
Zurück zum Zitat Ko FC, Walston JD.What is frailty? In: Evidenced based practice in palliative medicine Goldstein NE & Morrison S (Eds). Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2013. Chap 63 pg. 363–70. Ko FC, Walston JD.What is frailty? In: Evidenced based practice in palliative medicine Goldstein NE & Morrison S (Eds). Philadelphia: Elsevier; 2013. Chap 63 pg. 363–70.
53.
Zurück zum Zitat Fried LP, Tangen CM, Walston J, et al. Frailty in older adults: evidence for a phenotype Gerontol a biol Sci. Med Sci. 2001;56(3):M146–56. Fried LP, Tangen CM, Walston J, et al. Frailty in older adults: evidence for a phenotype Gerontol a biol Sci. Med Sci. 2001;56(3):M146–56.
54.
Zurück zum Zitat Jones DM, Song X, Rockwood K. Operationalizing a frailty index from a standardized comprehensive geriatric assessment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2004;52(11):1929–33.CrossRefPubMed Jones DM, Song X, Rockwood K. Operationalizing a frailty index from a standardized comprehensive geriatric assessment. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2004;52(11):1929–33.CrossRefPubMed
55.
Zurück zum Zitat de Vries NM, Staal JB, Olde MG, et al. Evaluative frailty index for physical activity (EFIP): a reliable and valid instrument to measure changes in level of frailty. Phys Ther. 2013;93:551–61.CrossRefPubMed de Vries NM, Staal JB, Olde MG, et al. Evaluative frailty index for physical activity (EFIP): a reliable and valid instrument to measure changes in level of frailty. Phys Ther. 2013;93:551–61.CrossRefPubMed
56.
Zurück zum Zitat Moorhouse IP, Rockwood K. Frailty and its quantitative clinical evaluation. JR Coll Physicians Edinb. 2012;42:333–4.CrossRef Moorhouse IP, Rockwood K. Frailty and its quantitative clinical evaluation. JR Coll Physicians Edinb. 2012;42:333–4.CrossRef
57.
Zurück zum Zitat Song X, Mitnitski A, Rockwood K. Prevalence and 10-year outcomes of frailty in older adults in relation to deficit accumulation. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2010;58:681–7.CrossRefPubMed Song X, Mitnitski A, Rockwood K. Prevalence and 10-year outcomes of frailty in older adults in relation to deficit accumulation. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2010;58:681–7.CrossRefPubMed
58.
Zurück zum Zitat Clegg A, Bates C, Young J, et al. Development and validation of an electronic frailty index using routine primary care electronic health record data. Age Ageing. 2016;0:1–8. Clegg A, Bates C, Young J, et al. Development and validation of an electronic frailty index using routine primary care electronic health record data. Age Ageing. 2016;0:1–8.
59.
Zurück zum Zitat Russell D. UCLA loneliness scale (version 3): reliability, validity, and factor structure. J Pers Assess. 1996;66:20–40.CrossRefPubMed Russell D. UCLA loneliness scale (version 3): reliability, validity, and factor structure. J Pers Assess. 1996;66:20–40.CrossRefPubMed
60.
Zurück zum Zitat Ware JE, Sherbourne CD. The MOS 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36): conceptual framework and item selection. Med Care. 1992;30:473–83.CrossRefPubMed Ware JE, Sherbourne CD. The MOS 36-item short-form health survey (SF-36): conceptual framework and item selection. Med Care. 1992;30:473–83.CrossRefPubMed
61.
Zurück zum Zitat Netten A, Forder J, Beadle-Brown J, et al. Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit Version 1.0 (ASCOT). Discussion Paper No. 2716, Personal Social Services Research Unit, University of Kent, Canterbury; 2010. Netten A, Forder J, Beadle-Brown J, et al. Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit Version 1.0 (ASCOT). Discussion Paper No. 2716, Personal Social Services Research Unit, University of Kent, Canterbury; 2010.
62.
Zurück zum Zitat Zarit SH, Orr NK, Zarit JM. The hidden victims of Alzheimer's disease. New York: Families under stress New York University Press; 1985. Zarit SH, Orr NK, Zarit JM. The hidden victims of Alzheimer's disease. New York: Families under stress New York University Press; 1985.
Metadaten
Titel
Standard set of health outcome measures for older persons
verfasst von
Asangaedem Akpan
Charlotte Roberts
Karen Bandeen-Roche
Barbara Batty
Claudia Bausewein
Diane Bell
David Bramley
Julie Bynum
Ian D. Cameron
Liang-Kung Chen
Anne Ekdahl
Arnold Fertig
Tom Gentry
Marleen Harkes
Donna Haslehurst
Jonathon Hope
Diana Rodriguez Hurtado
Helen Lyndon
Joanne Lynn
Mike Martin
Ruthe Isden
Francesco Mattace Raso
Sheila Shaibu
Jenny Shand
Cathie Sherrington
Samir Sinha
Gill Turner
Nienke De Vries
George Jia-Chyi Yi
John Young
Jay Banerjee
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2018
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Geriatrics / Ausgabe 1/2018
Elektronische ISSN: 1471-2318
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-017-0701-3

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 1/2018

BMC Geriatrics 1/2018 Zur Ausgabe

Leitlinien kompakt für die Innere Medizin

Mit medbee Pocketcards sicher entscheiden.

Seit 2022 gehört die medbee GmbH zum Springer Medizin Verlag

Update Innere Medizin

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.