Assuring the Patient Centeredness of Patient-Reported Outcomes- Content Validity in Medical Product Development and Comparative Effectiveness Research

Abstract

Not all patient-reported outcomes (PROs) are patient centered, and not all patient-centered outcomes are patient reported.
The essential characteristic of a patient-centered approach to outcome measurement is that it assesses concepts (i.e., health-related phenomena) that are considered most important by members of a given target population, based on direct input from representatives of that population. Concepts for measurement should not be selected based solely on convenience or interest to investigators. Patient-centered patient-reported outcome measures must meet this criterion and also be meaningful and comprehensible to members of a population when administered, including among those with diverse racial/cultural backgrounds and lower educational/literacy levels.

Authors

Ethan Basch Amy P. Abernethy Bryce B. Reeve

Your browser is out-of-date

ISPOR recommends that you update your browser for more security, speed and the best experience on ispor.org. Update my browser now

×