Abstract
BackgroundAlthough health-related quality of life (HRQOL) instruments may offer satisfactory results, their length often limits the extent to which they are actually applied in clinical practice. Efforts to develop short questionnaires have largely focused on reducing existing instruments. The approaches most frequently employed for this purpose rely on statistical procedures that are considered exponents of Classical Test Theory (CTT). Despite the popularity of CTT, two major conceptual limitations have been pointed out: the lack of an explicit ordered continuum of items that represent a unidimensional construct, and the lack of additivity of rating scale data. In contrast to the CTT approach, the Rasch model provides an alternative scaling methodology that enables the examination of the hierarchical structure, unidimensionality and additivity of HRQOL measures. METHODS: In order to empirically compare CTT and Rasch Analysis (RA) results, this paper presents the parallel reduction of a 38-item questionnaire, the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), through the analysis of the responses of a sample of 9,419 individuals.ResultsCTT resulted in 20 items (4 dimensions) whereas RA in 22 items (2 dimensions). Both instruments showed similar characteristics under CTT requirements: item-total correlation ranged 0.45–0.75 for NHP20 and 0.46–0.68 for NHP22, while reliability ranged 0.82–0.93 and 0.87–94 respectively.ConclusionsDespite the differences in content, NHP20 and NHP22 convergent scores also showed high degrees of association (0.78–0.95). Although the unidimensional view of health of the NHP20 and NHP22 composite scores was also confirmed by RA, NHP20 dimensions failed to meet the goodness-of fit criteria established by the Rasch model, precluding the interval-level of measurement of its scores.
Highlights
Several questionnaires have been developed and are currently in extensive use to assess health-related quality of life (HRQOL) [1]
The availability of shorter instruments would prove highly advantageous in many situations, both in clinical practice and research: questionnaires may require excessive patient or interviewer time, or may be inappropriate if the patient is unable to participate in a lengthy procedure; in order to reduce the burden of response, shorter instruments might prove beneficial when administered as part of a
The Nottingham Health Profile The Nottingham Health Profile (NHP38) is a generic measure of subjective health status developed in Great Britain in the 1970s and extensively used in Europe [1]
Summary
Several questionnaires have been developed and are currently in extensive use to assess health-related quality of life (HRQOL) [1] Such instruments may offer satisfactory properties in terms of measurement The approach most frequently employed when seeking to shorten instruments seems to be statistical, and includes factor analysis, correlations between long and short-forms, correlations between item and composite scores, Cronbach's Alpha per scale, or stepwise regression [2]. These procedures all are based on the same underlying scaling model. Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) instruments may offer satisfactory results, their length often limits the extent to which they are applied in clinical practice. METHODS: In order to empirically compare CTT and Rasch Analysis (RA) results, this paper presents the parallel reduction of a 38-item questionnaire, the Nottingham Health Profile (NHP), through the analysis of the responses of a sample of 9,419 individuals
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