Routine Outcome Monitoring (ROM) and Feedback: Research Review and Recommendations

Psychother Res. 2023 Sep;33(7):841-855. doi: 10.1080/10503307.2023.2181114. Epub 2023 Mar 17.

Abstract

Objective: To provide a research review of the components and outcomes of routine outcome monitoring (ROM) and recommendations for research and therapeutic practice.

Method: A narrative review of the three phases of ROM - data collection, feeding back data, and adapting therapy - and an overview of patient outcomes from 11 meta-analytic studies.

Results: Patients support ROM when its purpose is clear and integrated within therapy. Greater frequency of data collection is more important for shorter-term therapies, and use of graphs, greater specificity of feedback, and alerts are helpful. Overall effects on patient outcomes are statistically significant (g ≈ 0.15) and increase when clinical support tools (CSTs) are used for not-on-track cases (g ≈ 0.36-0.53). Effects are additive to standard effects of psychological therapies. Organizational, personnel, and resource issues remain the greatest obstacles to the successful adoption of ROM.

Conclusion: ROM offers a low-cost method for enhancing patient outcomes, on average resulting in an ≈ 8% advantage (success rate difference; SRD) over standard care. CSTs are particularly effective for not-on-track patients (SRD between ≈ 20% and 29%), but ROM does not work for all patients and successful implementation is a major challenge, along with securing appropriate cultural adaptations.

Keywords: ROM; clinical support tools; deterioration; feedback; measurement-based care; outcome measures; psychotherapy outcome; routine outcome monitoring.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Decision Support Systems, Clinical*
  • Feedback*
  • Humans
  • Patient Outcome Assessment*