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Core Items for a Standardized Resource Use Measure (ISRUM): expert delphi consensus survey

Authors :
Sara T Brookes
Dyfrig A. Hughes
Ruth Riley
Joanna Thorn
Sian Noble
Colin Ridyard
Sarah Wordsworth
Gail Thornton
William Hollingworth
Source :
Value in Health, Thorn, J C, Brookes, S T, Ridyard, C, Riley, R, Hughes, D A, Wordsworth, S, Noble, S M, Thornton, G & Hollingworth, W 2018, ' Core Items for a Standardized Resource Use Measure (ISRUM) : Expert Delphi Consensus Survey ', Value in Health, vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 640-649 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2017.06.011
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Resource-use measurement by patient recall is characterized by inconsistent methods and a lack of validation. A validated standardized resource-use measure could increase data quality, improve comparability between studies and reduce research burden.Aim: To identify a minimum set of core resource-use items that should be included in a standardized adult instrument for UK health economic evaluation from a provider perspective.Methods: Health economists with experience of UK-based economic evaluations were recruited to participate in an electronic Delphi survey. Respondents were asked to rate 60 resource-use items (e.g. medication names) on a scale of 1 to 9 according to the importance of the item in a generic context. Items considered less important according to predefined consensus criteria were dropped and a second survey was developed. In the second round, respondents received the median score and their own score from round 1 for each item alongside summarized comments and were asked to re-rate items. A final project team meeting was held to determine the recommended core set.Results: 45 participants completed round 1. 26 items were considered less important and dropped, 34 items were retained for the second round and no new items were added. 42 respondents completed round 2 (93.3%), and greater consensus was observed. Following the final meeting, a list of 10 core items was selected with further items identified as suitable for ‘bolt-on’ questionnaire modules.Conclusions: The consensus on 10 items considered important in a generic context suggests that a standardized instrument for core resource-use items is feasible.

Details

ISSN :
15244733 and 10983015
Volume :
21
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Value in Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d638be1c7477871c68d639c5a5e485e1