Ray Fitzpatrick and Priya Sugavanam
‘Core outcome sets’ have been developed in medical research; they are measures of the benefits and other outcomes of treatments that are seen as essential in clinical trials. When they are widely used, they make the overall interpretation of different trials easier, because everyone is using the same measures. They have not been widely explored in social care research due to the less number of trials and the broad remit of social care.
To develop a core outcome set, our group (QSO Policy Research Unit) established a panel of 25 members (11 researchers, 8 members of public and 6 social care professionals/managers). Relevant research evidence about outcome measures was presented to this panel to reach agreement about two things:
We reached agreement that trials and evaluative studies in adult social care should normally include six areas: well-being, health-related quality of life, functional ability, carers’ perspectives, experience with services, service use and costs. For the first four areas, specific measures were also agreed and recommended.
Ray Fitzpatrick, raymond.fitzpatrick@dph.ox.ac.uk .