Veteran Symptom Assessment Scale (VSAS) in a Text Messaging Platform

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Background: Oncologists are often not aware of the symptom burden their patients experience. Patient reported outcome (PRO) assessments are tools to measure symptoms. Higher symptom burden is associated with worse quality of life (QOL) and shorter survival, and implementation of PRO assessments is associated with improved QOL and longer survival. The Veteran Symptom Assessment Scale (VSAS) is a PRO template that is incorporated into the Veteran Administration’s (VA) computer patient record system. It is used by health care team members to record patient symptoms and is consistent and reproducible. However, as VSAS is administered at patient visits, it cannot measure between-visit symptoms. Thus, we sought to develop a platform by which veterans receiving hematology- oncology care can directly report their symptoms at any time.

Description: VA Office of Connected Care developed a text messaging platform called “Annie” which includes different disease-based assessment and automated management tools. Annie is named after Lieutenant Annie G. Fox, Chief Nurse in the Army Nurse Corps at Hickman Field, Pearl Harbor and the first woman to receive the Purple Heart for combat.

We developed an oncology symptom module in Annie that incorporates the VSAS symptoms, with a rating scale of 1 – 10 (1 = least severe, 10 = most severe). Veterans signed up for the oncology module receive weekday reminders to report symptoms, but may report symptoms on any day and time, even multiple times a day. After reporting a symptom and severity, a message with advice is texted to the veteran. This text is provided for self-help purposes, and does not replace individualized advice provided by an oncology nurse or provider. The Annie oncology module is available throughout the VA.

Implications: The Annie oncology module may improve implementation of VSAS at VA facilities, by removing the necessity for nurse administration. Using Annie will help VA facilities meet quality of care goals recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and American College of Surgeon and will improve measurement of cancer related symptoms, a first step to developing symptom management tools for VA providers.

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Correspondence: Daphne Friedman (daphne.friedman@duke.edu)

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Correspondence: Daphne Friedman (daphne.friedman@duke.edu)

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Correspondence: Daphne Friedman (daphne.friedman@duke.edu)

Background: Oncologists are often not aware of the symptom burden their patients experience. Patient reported outcome (PRO) assessments are tools to measure symptoms. Higher symptom burden is associated with worse quality of life (QOL) and shorter survival, and implementation of PRO assessments is associated with improved QOL and longer survival. The Veteran Symptom Assessment Scale (VSAS) is a PRO template that is incorporated into the Veteran Administration’s (VA) computer patient record system. It is used by health care team members to record patient symptoms and is consistent and reproducible. However, as VSAS is administered at patient visits, it cannot measure between-visit symptoms. Thus, we sought to develop a platform by which veterans receiving hematology- oncology care can directly report their symptoms at any time.

Description: VA Office of Connected Care developed a text messaging platform called “Annie” which includes different disease-based assessment and automated management tools. Annie is named after Lieutenant Annie G. Fox, Chief Nurse in the Army Nurse Corps at Hickman Field, Pearl Harbor and the first woman to receive the Purple Heart for combat.

We developed an oncology symptom module in Annie that incorporates the VSAS symptoms, with a rating scale of 1 – 10 (1 = least severe, 10 = most severe). Veterans signed up for the oncology module receive weekday reminders to report symptoms, but may report symptoms on any day and time, even multiple times a day. After reporting a symptom and severity, a message with advice is texted to the veteran. This text is provided for self-help purposes, and does not replace individualized advice provided by an oncology nurse or provider. The Annie oncology module is available throughout the VA.

Implications: The Annie oncology module may improve implementation of VSAS at VA facilities, by removing the necessity for nurse administration. Using Annie will help VA facilities meet quality of care goals recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and American College of Surgeon and will improve measurement of cancer related symptoms, a first step to developing symptom management tools for VA providers.

Background: Oncologists are often not aware of the symptom burden their patients experience. Patient reported outcome (PRO) assessments are tools to measure symptoms. Higher symptom burden is associated with worse quality of life (QOL) and shorter survival, and implementation of PRO assessments is associated with improved QOL and longer survival. The Veteran Symptom Assessment Scale (VSAS) is a PRO template that is incorporated into the Veteran Administration’s (VA) computer patient record system. It is used by health care team members to record patient symptoms and is consistent and reproducible. However, as VSAS is administered at patient visits, it cannot measure between-visit symptoms. Thus, we sought to develop a platform by which veterans receiving hematology- oncology care can directly report their symptoms at any time.

Description: VA Office of Connected Care developed a text messaging platform called “Annie” which includes different disease-based assessment and automated management tools. Annie is named after Lieutenant Annie G. Fox, Chief Nurse in the Army Nurse Corps at Hickman Field, Pearl Harbor and the first woman to receive the Purple Heart for combat.

We developed an oncology symptom module in Annie that incorporates the VSAS symptoms, with a rating scale of 1 – 10 (1 = least severe, 10 = most severe). Veterans signed up for the oncology module receive weekday reminders to report symptoms, but may report symptoms on any day and time, even multiple times a day. After reporting a symptom and severity, a message with advice is texted to the veteran. This text is provided for self-help purposes, and does not replace individualized advice provided by an oncology nurse or provider. The Annie oncology module is available throughout the VA.

Implications: The Annie oncology module may improve implementation of VSAS at VA facilities, by removing the necessity for nurse administration. Using Annie will help VA facilities meet quality of care goals recommended by the American Society of Clinical Oncology and American College of Surgeon and will improve measurement of cancer related symptoms, a first step to developing symptom management tools for VA providers.

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Abstract Presented at the 2019 Association of VA Hematology/Oncology Annual Meeting
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