Acceptability of the method of administration of a patient-reported outcome measure (PROM) with stroke survivors, a randomised controlled trial protocol
Background: UK-wide national clinical guidelines promote routine 6-month post-stroke follow-up assessment.
However, as part of this 6-month assessment little information is gathered from the patient’s perspective. The
means of collecting this patient-centred information might be served best by a patient-reported outcome measure
(PROM) at the 6-month assessment time point. Currently, four different methods of 6-month follow-up assessment
occur; the most common being face-to-face interview followed by telephone interview, postal questionnaire and
online questionnaire. Therefore, this study will investigate if the acceptability of telephone, online or postal
administration of a PROM at the 6-month post-stoke time point is not inferior to face-to-face administration.
Methods/design: A UK multicentre, blinded (analyst and researcher), pragmatic, non-inferiority study, with 80%
power using a 2.5% non-inferiority margin was designed to compare the acceptability of three modes of
administration (telephone interview, postal questionnaire and online questionnaire) compared with face-to-face
interview administration of a PROM. We plan to approach and randomise a minimum of 808 potentially eligible
participants, 202 participants per group.
Discussion: The aim of this ongoing research is to understand if there is a difference between face-to-face
administration and the other three methods of administering a PROM as a patient-centred supplement to the
6-month review for stroke survivors. In utilising a pragmatic design, it is believed that this study will offer UK wide
generalisable results, of the acceptability of the methods under investigation, to inform clinicians and
commissioners of stroke services