Too many ways to say 'it hurts'
Too many ways to say 'it hurts'
There are at least 100 ways to say, "It hurts!" And that is the problem.
David Cella, PhD, is on mission, backed by nearly $10 million in National Institutes of Health (NIH) funds, to revolutionize the language of pain, as well as fatigue, depression, and anxiety. These are some of the important symptoms researchers measure when they try to figure out if a medical treatment improves the quality of life for a patient with a chronic disease.
Are they in too much pain to unload groceries from the car? Are they too tired or depressed to go out to lunch with a friend? The answers are vital for researchers to know if new treatments are useful or useless.
However, the glitch is that every group of researchers asks patients different questions to measure their symptoms. Thus, one group's measurement of severe pain or fatigue or depression might be different than another's. Because researchers aren't speaking a common language, doctors and other health care providers can't compare the results across studies to decide which is the best approach. Instead, study results remain separate puzzle pieces that never fit together into a whole picture.
"Can you imagine if a doctor wanted to check your hemoglobin, and there weren't any numbers to measure whether it was normal?" asked Cella, professor and chair of the new Department of Medical Social Sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and a member of the Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University, both in Chicago. "When you say a patient's hemoglobin is 11, everybody knows what it means; but nobody knows what a pain of 36 means or a fatigue of 32 because we don't use common measures."
Common vocabulary to be established
That's about to change. Cella is leading a far-reaching new national project that establishes a common scientific vocabulary. In August, he and colleagues from six other institutions and the NIH released a set of free publicly available computerized tests for researchers to measure pain, fatigue, depression, anxiety, and physical and social functioning. Now there will be a pain measurement of 75, for example, that will mean the same thing to every doctor and scientist. The new project is called Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement Information System (PROMIS). More than 1,000 researchers already have registered to try the new tools, available at www.nihpromis.org.
Cella's project addresses President Obama's call for greater accountability in medical treatment. "In order to have a system that works that way you need a consistent measure of outcomes that people can understand and relate to," Cella said. "That's what we have developed."
The lack of a common vocabulary has hurt research, Cella noted. "It's a Tower of Babel, a hodgepodge of language. It's a big problem because you can't migrate the results of one study to a broader understanding," he said. "We keep having to learn the same things over and over. We are not building on a foundation of knowledge."
Not only have Cella and his team created a new language and tool for researchers, but the PROMIS project also represents a shift in the way researchers evaluate the benefits of treatments. The goal is not just to help people live longer but also live better. X-rays, CT scans, and lab tests may have minimal relevance to the day-to-day functioning of patients with chronic diseases. "We help measure directly if people are living better by asking them," Cella said. "Sometimes, it's as simple as asking, 'Do you think this treatment has made your life better?' That question is surprisingly absent from many studies."
There are at least 100 ways to say, "It hurts!" And that is the problem.Subscribe Now for Access
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