PROMUSE Respiratory Study: Survey on PROM Adoption for Asthma and Rhinitis
by Ivan Cherrez-Ojeda·Updated 1mo ago
17.3 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
Sign in to view source links and access this dataset
Description
439 practitioners participated in a cross-sectional survey on the use of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) for asthma, allergic rhinitis, and rhinosinusitis. The study, authored by Ivan Cherrez-Ojeda and updated in April 2026, found the ACT, RCAT, and SNOTT-22 were the most used PROMs, with time constraints cited as the primary barrier to adoption by 75.40% of respondents.
Use Cases
Analyze adoption patterns of specific PROMs like ACT, RCAT, and SNOTT-22 among different physician specialties.
Identify barriers to clinical implementation based on the reported reasons for usage and obstacles like time constraints.
Study correlations between practitioner experience, certification, and their likelihood of using PROMs for disease monitoring.
Strengths
Includes responses from 439 practitioners, providing a substantive sample size for analysis.
Reports specific, statistically significant adoption rates (e.g., 86% of pulmonologists use asthma PROMs).
Clearly identifies the top three PROMs used (ACT at 66.74%, RCAT at 27.79%, SNOTT22 at 15.26%).
Limitations
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for large-scale modeling.
The 17.3 KB file size suggests the dataset is very small, likely containing summary results rather than raw survey responses.
Provenance
Source
Questionnaire disseminated to practitioners in the ARIA, UCARE, ADCARE, and ACARE networks.
Collection Method
Cross-sectional observational study using a questionnaire; analysis performed with Stata 18.0.
Time Range
null
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-24 13:59:20; freshness should be verified.
Geography
null
Data is provided in a DOCX file format, which may require conversion for programmatic analysis.