PROM Detail

The Oxford Patient Involvement and Experience Questionnaire
  • Basic Information
  • Detailed Information
  • Domains
  • Psychometrics

Basic Information

Abbreviated name
OxPIE
Full name
The Oxford Patient Involvement and Experience Questionnaire
Items ?
The number of questions in the survey
11
Short description
A UK based 11 item measure for assessing inpatient care for patients with Limiting Long Term conditions (LLTCs). Items tap areas of the following domains: My goals/ outcomes, care Planning, transitions, decision making, information and communication. It has been used to that Patients with LLTCs were more critical of their inpatient care than those with no LLTCs (Hewitson et al. 2014).
PCCC or QoL? ?
This compendium contains patient-reported measures that are either designed to specifically measure aspects of Person Centred Co-Ordinated Care (P3C), or alternatively tools that are designed to measure some aspect of Quality of Life (QoL) or Health Related Quality of Life (hrQoL). All the measures in this compendium have been broadly categorised into one of those two concepts.
Person Centred Coordinated Care
Main Domains Measured ?
This is the key domains that the measure is targeting.
My goals/ outcomes, care Planning, transitions, decision making, information and communication.
Type of measure ?
The measures in this compendium can take a variety of forms. Generally, they will be either Patient Reported Outcome Measure (PROM) or Patient Reported Experience Measure (PREM). However, we have also included a few measures that are completed by proxy-individual (PROXY), which are useful in instances where the respondent cannot answer directly (e.g. dementia or end of life). Sometimes, these measures can even be a composite of these types, and target both experiences and outcomes – we have labelled these measures “PROEMs”.
PREM
Respondent ?
The person that fills in the questionnaire - e.g. patient, Health Care Professional, or proxy (normally a carer or family member)
Patients

Detailed Information

Year developed ?
The year in which the measure was first published.
2014
Country developed in ?
The main country[s] in which the measure was first developed.
UK
Original publication ?
The publication in which the measure was originally published.
Website link ?
A link to the developer of the measure, if they have a website.
Target condition ?
The measures can be either generic or disease specific (e.g. Diabetes, Heart Failure)
Long term conditions
Main context tested in ?
The main context in which the measure has been developed and used (E.g. Hopital, General Practice etc).
Inpatient
Main countries used in ?
The main countries in which the measure has been developed and used.
UK
Target age ?
e.g. Adults, Children, Elderly
Adults
Main uses of measure ?
The context in which the measure is most often used – e.g. clinical trials; national surveys.
To assess people with LTC's experiences of care.
Used in UK? ?
Whether the instrument has been tested and validated within a UK healthcare context.
Yes
Impact ?
A crude indication of the impact of the measure on academia. This is the number of times the original publication has been cited on PubMed, divided/normalised to the years since publication.
1.5
Language
English
Flesch-Kincaid readability tests ?
A rating that corresponds approximately to US school grade level. For example, a score of 8.0 means that an eighth grader can understand the document. Generally, a score of 7 or 8 should be appropriate.
9.9

Domains

Domain description
My goals/ outcomes, care Planning, transitions, decision making and information and communication.
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
3
2
1
2
1
1
2
2
6
Empowerment/activation
Self-management
Carer involvement
Single point of contact
Care coordination within teams
Continuity of care
Shared decision making
Behaviour and communication skills
Information sharing

Psychometrics

Brief description ?
A brief description of the initially reported psychometric properties of the measure.
The internal consistency of the OxPIE scale has been reported to be good (KR-20 = 0.85) and the correlation between the eleven-item scale and the 31 item