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Patrick Marquis

Researcher at University of Washington

Publications -  46
Citations -  2232

Patrick Marquis is an academic researcher from University of Washington. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Qualitative research. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1942 citations.

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Incorporating the Patient's Perspective into Drug Development and Communication: An Ad Hoc Task Force Report of the Patient‐Reported Outcomes (PRO) Harmonization Group Meeting at the Food and Drug Administration, February 16, 2001

TL;DR: The February 16, 2001, meeting represented an important step in harmonizing efforts across various organizations and in opening a dialogue with the FDA around major issues related to methodologic standards for measuring and interpreting PROs in the drug evaluation process.
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PRO development: rigorous qualitative research as the crucial foundation

TL;DR: The approach described combines an overarching phenomenological theoretical framework with grounded theory data collection and analysis methods to yield PRO items and scales that have content validity.
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Patient-Reported Outcomes: The Example of Health-Related Quality of Life—A European Guidance Document for the Improved Integration of Health-Related Quality of Life Assessment in the Drug Regulatory Process:

TL;DR: To gain wider acceptance, whether HRQOL is considered as a primary or secondary endpoint, the scientific principles of clinical trial design should apply toHRQOL.
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Clinical Outcome Assessments: Conceptual Foundation—Report of the ISPOR Clinical Outcomes Assessment – Emerging Good Practices for Outcomes Research Task Force

TL;DR: The foundation provided in this report includes what it means to demonstrate a beneficial effect, how assessments of patients relate to the objective of showing a treatment's benefit, and how these assessments are used in clinical trial endpoints.
Journal Article

Quality of life in patients with stomas: the Montreux Study.

TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that stoma patient quality of life can be assessed, that it changes over time, and that patient access to specialist ostomy care nurses is particularly important during the first 3 to 6 months following surgery.