Digital Toolkit for Outcome Measurement in Orthotics

Lead Research Organisation: University of Salford
Department Name: School of Health and Society

Abstract

The use of structured, valid and reliable outcome measures within prosthetics and orthotics is considerably varied across clinical settings. This means it is difficult to evaluate clinical interventions, elicit health behaviour change in users, and most importantly enable patients to engage in their care

Outcome measures can be applied for multiple purposes, from setting patient focused goals to assessing quality of life, quantifying device/treatment performance and evaluating patient satisfaction with a clinical service. To be effective, they should be developed with user and stake-holder input to ensure they are both relevant, understandable and easy to use.

Currently a range of validated and bespoke paper questionnaires (including objective and patient reported outcome measures) or specific functional assessments (including timed walk tests and comfort/fit scores) are applied. This multitude of independent scores combined with clinical observation data can often lead to a complex set of metrics for each patient which are not easy to interpret over time. Attempts to standardise the practice exist through recommended tool sets (BAPO, ISPO:AMPROM) yet challenges remain to integration into routine clinical practice

Opportunities exist to integrate the data collected across multiple outcome measures using a common digital platform, making it easier for patients and clinicians to access when it is most relevant and monitor progress over time. Giving patients this access promotes engagement and can be used to inform and support a change in behaviour (if patients needs are appropriately identified)

Planned Impact

The CDT students will help create solutions for amputees and people with debilitating conditions such as stroke and diabetes, reducing mortality and enabling them to live more satisfying, productive and fulfilling lives. These solutions, co-created with industry and people living with disabilities, will have direct economic and societal benefits. The principal beneficiaries are industry, P&O service delivery, people who need P&O devices, and society in general.
Industry
The novel methods, devices and processes co-created with users and industry will have a direct economic value to our industry partners (by the creation of IP, new products, and improved industry and academic links). Our CDT graduates will be the natural potential employees of our industry partners and for companies in the wider healthcare technology sector. This will help address the identified critical skills need and shortage leading to improvement in the UK's competitiveness in this rapidly developing and growing global market. The CDT outcomes will help UK businesses spread risk (because new developments are well founded) and more confidently enter new markets with highly skilled employees (CDT graduates).

P&O service delivery
Doctoral engineering graduates with clinical knowledge are needed to improve the deployment of advanced technologies in practice. Our main UK industry partner, Blatchford, stated: "As technology develops it will become easier for the end-user (the patient), but the providers (the clinicians) are going to need to have a higher level of engineering training, ideally to PhD level". The British Association of Prosthetists and Orthotists estimates that no more than ten practising P&O clinicians have a PhD in the UK. Long-term P&O clinical academic leadership will be substantially improved by the CDT supporting a select number of clinically qualified P&O professionals to gain doctorates.

Users
The innovation of devices, use of device and patient monitoring, and innovation approaches in LMIC should not only lead to improved care but also lower healthcare costs. Diabetes UK estimates that the total healthcare expenditure related to foot ulceration and amputation in diabetes was £1billion (2014-15), with 2/3 of this related to foot ulceration. Small innovations could lead to large cost savings if targeted at the right aspects of care (e.g. earlier adoption, and reducing device abandonment).
An ability to work is fundamental to a person's place in society and their sense of purpose and has a significant societal impact in all territories. This is perhaps greatest in LMIC where attitudes towards disability may still be maturing, and appropriate social care infrastructure is not always in place. In these cases, an ability to work is essential for survival.
Improved design approaches will impact on all users regardless of context, since the device solutions will better match local and individual user needs. Addressing issues related to prosthetic/orthotic device abandonment (e.g. cosmesis) and improved adherence should also lead to greater social participation. Improved device solutions will shift focus from what users "cannot do" to what they now "can do", and help progress attitudes towards acceptance of disability.
Societal
The majority of the global P&O users are of working age, and a key economic impact will be keeping users in work. The average age at amputation due to diabetes is just 52 in the USA but much younger in countries with less well-developed health care and trauma services (e.g. 38 in Iran). Diabetes UK reports that 35-50% of people are of working age at diagnosis and that there are around 70,000 foot ulcers in the UK, precursors to amputation. There is a similar concern for stroke survivors around a quarter of whom are of working age and are 2-3 times more likely to be out of work after eight years.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/S02249X/1 01/04/2019 30/09/2031
2473815 Studentship EP/S02249X/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2024 Victoria Gittins