Question
10.1
For the past year,
the nursing department has included two fatigue assessment
items on the form completed by the nurse every time a patient
is admitted. The items are read to the patient and the responses
are recorded by the nurse. The form becomes part of the medical
record. The first fatigue item states, "We are interested
in learning whether fatigue was a problem for you prior to
the illness that brought you to the hospital. On an average
week, did you experience a level of persistent fatigue that
prevented you from functioning as you wanted to?" The
second fatigue item states, "If so, we would like to
know the severity of your fatigue during a typical week before
you developed the illness that brought you to the hospital.
On a scale from 0 to 10, where 0 is no fatigue and 10 is the
worst fatigue imaginable, how severe was your fatigue on average
during a typical week?"
You have an interest
in learning about the differences in baseline fatigue between
a population with metastatic solid tumor and a population
with advanced congestive heart failure. You would like to
acquire scientifically credible data, but your resources are
limited and you also are considering writing a grant proposal
to seek funding for a large and methodologically exquisite
study. You gather together a group of potential collaborators
to discuss the research issues. One of the collaborators states
that the data included on the nurse assessment form is useless
and the only way forward is a prospective study of patients
after admission.
How do you respond
to your colleague?
| Although
the data on the nurse form would be collected retrospectively,
the nurses who completed the form were acquiring the information
prospectively. The data include not only prevalence, but
severity as well, and a large amount of additional data
about demographics and the disease could be collected
from the charts. A chart review could yield a large sample
size, facilitating a multivariate statistical analysis
that could describe differences in factors associated
with fatigue in cancer and fatigue in CHF. The chart review
is consistent with the resources we have. The data we
would get are scientifically credible and would duplicate
any cross-sectional prospective study that we could do.
We should definitely do the chart review. |
| The
chart review is indeed useless and a prospective survey
of patients after admission is the minimum required to
address this scientific question. |
| The
chart review is not useless. Let's start with a review
of 100 records---50 from cancer patients and 50 from CHF
patients---and see whether the information we collect
can help us design a prospective survey. |