Publication

Patient-reported outcome assessment after total joint replacement: comparison of questionnaire completion times on paper and tablet computer

Journal Paper/Review - May 10, 2015

Units
Keywords
Patient-reported outcome

Electronic data capture

WOMAC score

Forgotten Joint Score-12

Time factors
PubMed
Doi
Link
Contact

Citation
Kesterke N, Egeter J, Erhardt J, Jost B, Giesinger K. Patient-reported outcome assessment after total joint replacement: comparison of questionnaire completion times on paper and tablet computer. Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery 2015; 135:935-941.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Archives of orthopaedic and trauma surgery 2015; 135
Publication Date
May 10, 2015
Issn Print
0936-8051
Issn Electronic
1434-3916
Pages
935-941
Publisher
Springer (Heidelberg)
Brief description/objective

Abstract


Introduction

Patient-reported outcome (PRO) assessment is becoming increasingly important after joint replacement surgery. However, PRO data collection, questionnaire handling, and data processing are time consuming and costly process. The aim of our study was to evaluate the efficiency of PRO assessment using tablet computers compared with traditional paper questionnaires in a total hip or knee arthroplasty (THR or TKR) population.


Materials and methods

We recruited 100 patients from outpatient clinics attending for routine follow-up 2 months, 1 year, or 5 years after THR or TKR. Fifty patients completed the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities (WOMAC) osteoarthritis score and Forgotten Joint Score-12 (FJS-12) questionnaires on paper, and 50 patients completed these on a tablet computer. Questionnaire completion was timed for each PRO assessment and for manual data entry of the paper questionnaires into the database. The t test, Mann–Whitney U test, Fisher’s exact test, and Wilcoxon test were used for statistical analysis.


Results

The mean age of the patients was 67.0 years (standard deviation 10.3 years), with no significant difference between the two groups. Median time for WOMAC questionnaire completion (including data entry for the paper questionnaires) was 197 s for the paper version and 117 s for the tablet version (p < 0.001). Median times for completion of FJS-12 were comparable for paper and tablet versions (32 vs. 37 s). We did not find a significant correlation between age and time for questionnaire completion.


Conclusion

Electronic PRO data collection can substantially decrease time, logistics, and effort associated with questionnaire completion in daily clinical practice. It is also acceptable for use in an older arthroplasty population.