학술논문

Development of a Set of Lupus‐Specific, Ambulatory Care–Sensitive, Potentially Preventable Adverse Conditions: A Delphi Consensus Study
Document Type
article
Source
Arthritis Care & Research. 73(1)
Subject
Health Services and Systems
Health Sciences
Clinical Research
Lupus
Health Services
Autoimmune Disease
Patient Safety
Prevention
Inflammatory and immune system
Good Health and Well Being
Ambulatory Care
Consensus
Delphi Technique
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
Female
Humans
Infertility
Lupus Erythematosus
Systemic
Opportunistic Infections
Primary Ovarian Insufficiency
Protective Factors
Rheumatology
Risk Assessment
Risk Factors
Vaccination
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Psychology
Clinical sciences
Allied health and rehabilitation science
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveIndividuals with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) are at high risk for infections and SLE- and medication-related complications. The present study was undertaken to define a set of SLE-specific adverse outcomes that could be prevented, or their complications minimized, if timely, effective ambulatory care had been received.MethodsWe used a modified Delphi process beginning with a literature review and key informant interviews to select initial SLE-specific potentially preventable conditions. We assembled a panel of 16 nationally recognized US-based experts from 8 subspecialties. Guided by the RAND-UCLA Appropriateness Method, we held 2 survey rounds with controlled feedback and an interactive webinar to reach consensus regarding preventability and importance on a population level for a set of SLE-specific adverse conditions. In a final round, the panelists endorsed the potentially preventable conditions.ResultsThirty-five potential conditions were initially proposed; 62 conditions were ultimately considered during the Delphi process. The response rate was 100% for both survey rounds, 88% for the webinar, and 94% for final approval. The 25 SLE-specific conditions meeting consensus as potentially preventable and important on a population level fell into 4 categories: vaccine-preventable illnesses (6 conditions), medication-related complications (8 conditions), reproductive health-related complications (6 conditions), and SLE-related complications (5 conditions).ConclusionWe reached consensus on a diverse set of adverse outcomes relevant to SLE patients that may be preventable if patients receive high-quality ambulatory care. This set of outcomes may be studied at the health system level to determine how to best allocate resources and improve quality to reduce avoidable outcomes and disparities among those at highest risk.