Can Patients Use an Automated Questionnaire to Define Their Current Health Status?

Patient management decisions rarely incorporate standardized health status assessments, since accurate and reliable measures are difficult and expensive to obtain. In prior research with various methods for obtaining health data from patients, it was found that physicians' acceptance of a metho...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medical care 1992-05, Vol.30 (5), p.MS74-MS84
Hauptverfasser: Roizen, Michael F., Coalson, Dennis, Robert S. A. Hayward, Schmittner, John, Thisted, Ronald A., Apfelbaum, Jeffrey L., Stocking, Carol B., Cassel, Christine K., Pompei, Peter, Ford, Daniel E., Steinberg, Earl P.
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container_end_page MS84
container_issue 5
container_start_page MS74
container_title Medical care
container_volume 30
creator Roizen, Michael F.
Coalson, Dennis
Robert S. A. Hayward
Schmittner, John
Thisted, Ronald A.
Apfelbaum, Jeffrey L.
Stocking, Carol B.
Cassel, Christine K.
Pompei, Peter
Ford, Daniel E.
Steinberg, Earl P.
description Patient management decisions rarely incorporate standardized health status assessments, since accurate and reliable measures are difficult and expensive to obtain. In prior research with various methods for obtaining health data from patients, it was found that physicians' acceptance of a method was improved if it provided an individualized printout. It was also determined that patients will readily complete a health status questionnaire on a computer when the computer does not look like a computer. Patients' acceptance was greatest when they were presented with a single line of large, pressure-sensitive buttons with which they could respond to questions about their health histories. Using such an instrument, the HealthQuiz, the current study found the same discrepancy rate (3%) between patients' responses to health questions presented on HealthQuiz and during interview as between their responses to questions asked during two separate interviews. Further, to ascertain health status, rules determined by an expert panel were applied to patients' responses to health questions presented on the HealthQuiz screen. It was found that the numerical health status derived from answers to the automated presentation of questions was similar to numerical health status derived by a physician after a patient-physician interview.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/00005650-199205001-00007
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Aged
American culture
Anesthesia
Anesthesiology
Attitude to Computers
Coronary artery disease
Diabetes
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted - standards
Empirical Papers
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Health Status
Health Status Indicators
Humans
Interviews
Interviews as Topic - standards
Lung diseases
Medical History Taking - methods
Middle Aged
Physicians
Preoperative Care - methods
Preventive Medicine
Questionnaires
Surveys and Questionnaires - standards
United States
title Can Patients Use an Automated Questionnaire to Define Their Current Health Status?
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