Abstract
Older persons with multiple chronic conditions are at substantial risk for unintended adverse outcomes, such as medication adverse events. Less severe adverse events are commonly referred to as “side effects,” implying that they are secondary to disease-specific benefits. However, patients consider these adverse events to be important outcomes in their own right.1 Such findings suggest that all possible benefits and harms resulting from different treatment options be considered as competing outcomes, among which older persons with multiple chronic conditions face trade-offs. When treatments involve trade-offs, the best option depends upon patients’ preferences. The challenge for older persons with multiple conditions is that these trade-offs encompass both many different specific diseases and non disease-specific health domains.2 One approach to this challenge is to consider treatment in terms of its effects on a set of universal, cross-disease outcomes and to use older persons’ prioritization of these outcomes as an assessment of preferences. These outcomes, examples of which include length of life, physical and cognitive function, and symptoms, include basic domains recognized to be the key components of health.3 The goal of this study was to explore the use of a simple to tool to elicit older persons’ health outcome priorities.
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Publication Info
- Year
- 2011
- Type
- letter
- Volume
- 171
- Issue
- 20
- Pages
- 1856-1856
- Citations
- 410
- Access
- Closed
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Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1001/archinternmed.2011.424