TY - JOUR
T1 - An International, Multidisciplinary Consensus Set of Patient-Centered Outcome Measures for Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders
AU - Black, Nicola
AU - Chung, Sophie
AU - Tisdale, Calvert
AU - Fialho, Luz Sousa
AU - Aramrattana, Apinun
AU - Assanangkornchai, Sawitri
AU - Blaszczynski, Alex
AU - Bowden-Jones, Henrietta
AU - van den Brink, Wim
AU - Brown, Adrian
AU - Brown, Qiana L.
AU - Cottler, Linda B.
AU - Elsasser, Maury
AU - Ferri, Marica
AU - Florence, Maria
AU - Gueorguieva, Ralitza
AU - Hampton, Ryan
AU - Hudson, Suzie
AU - Kelly, Peter J.
AU - Lintzeris, Nicholas
AU - Murphy, Lynette
AU - Nadkarni, Abhijit
AU - Neale, Joanne
AU - Rosen, Daniel
AU - Rumpf, Hans-J. rgen
AU - Rush, Brian
AU - Segal, Gabriel
AU - Shorter, Gillian W.
AU - Torrens, Marta
AU - Wait, Christopher
AU - Young, Katherine
AU - Farrell, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2024 by the authors.
PY - 2024/4/1
Y1 - 2024/4/1
N2 - Background: In 1990, the United States’ Institute of Medicine promoted the principles of outcomes monitoring in the alcohol and other drugs treatment field to improve the evidence synthesis and quality of research. While various national outcome measures have been developed and employed, no global consensus on standard measurement has been agreed for addiction. It is thus timely to build an international consensus. Convened by the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM), an international, multi-disciplinary working group reviewed the existing literature and reached consensus for a globally applicable minimum set of outcome measures for people who seek treatment for addiction. Methods: To this end, 26 addiction experts from 11 countries and 5 continents, including people with lived experience (n = 5; 19%), convened over 16 months (December 2018–March 2020) to develop recommendations for a minimum set of outcome measures. A structured, consensus-building, modified Delphi process was employed. Evidence-based proposals for the minimum set of measures were generated and discussed across eight videoconferences and in a subsequent structured online consultation. The resulting set was reviewed by 123 professionals and 34 people with lived experience internationally. Results: The final consensus-based recommendation includes alcohol, substance, and tobacco use disorders, as well as gambling and gaming disorders in people aged 12 years and older. Recommended outcome domains are frequency and quantity of addictive disorders, symptom burden, health-related quality of life, global functioning, psychosocial functioning, and overall physical and mental health and wellbeing. Standard case-mix (moderator) variables and measurement time points are also recommended. Conclusions: Use of consistent and meaningful outcome measurement facilitates carer–patient relations, shared decision-making, service improvement, benchmarking, and evidence synthesis for the evaluation of addiction treatment services and the dissemination of best practices. The consensus set of recommended outcomes is freely available for adoption in healthcare settings globally.
AB - Background: In 1990, the United States’ Institute of Medicine promoted the principles of outcomes monitoring in the alcohol and other drugs treatment field to improve the evidence synthesis and quality of research. While various national outcome measures have been developed and employed, no global consensus on standard measurement has been agreed for addiction. It is thus timely to build an international consensus. Convened by the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM), an international, multi-disciplinary working group reviewed the existing literature and reached consensus for a globally applicable minimum set of outcome measures for people who seek treatment for addiction. Methods: To this end, 26 addiction experts from 11 countries and 5 continents, including people with lived experience (n = 5; 19%), convened over 16 months (December 2018–March 2020) to develop recommendations for a minimum set of outcome measures. A structured, consensus-building, modified Delphi process was employed. Evidence-based proposals for the minimum set of measures were generated and discussed across eight videoconferences and in a subsequent structured online consultation. The resulting set was reviewed by 123 professionals and 34 people with lived experience internationally. Results: The final consensus-based recommendation includes alcohol, substance, and tobacco use disorders, as well as gambling and gaming disorders in people aged 12 years and older. Recommended outcome domains are frequency and quantity of addictive disorders, symptom burden, health-related quality of life, global functioning, psychosocial functioning, and overall physical and mental health and wellbeing. Standard case-mix (moderator) variables and measurement time points are also recommended. Conclusions: Use of consistent and meaningful outcome measurement facilitates carer–patient relations, shared decision-making, service improvement, benchmarking, and evidence synthesis for the evaluation of addiction treatment services and the dissemination of best practices. The consensus set of recommended outcomes is freely available for adoption in healthcare settings globally.
KW - Delphi
KW - ICHOM
KW - addiction
KW - addictive disorders
KW - consensus set
KW - core outcome set
KW - gambling disorder
KW - gaming disorder
KW - outcome measures
KW - patient-centered
KW - substance use
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85190298412&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3390/jcm13072154
DO - 10.3390/jcm13072154
M3 - Article
C2 - 38610919
SN - 2077-0383
VL - 13
JO - Journal of clinical medicine
JF - Journal of clinical medicine
IS - 7
M1 - 2154
ER -