Abstract

BackgroundThe Rapkin and Schwartz appraisal theory and measure provided a path toward documenting response-shift effects and describing individual differences in ways of thinking about quality of life (QOL) that distinguished people in different circumstances. Recent work developed and validated the QOL Appraisal Profileversion 2 (QOLAPv2), an 85-item measure that taps response-shift-detection domains of Frame of Reference, Standards of Comparison, Sampling of Experience, and Combinatory Algorithm. Recent theoretical work proposed that appraisal measurement constitutes a new class of measurement (idiometric), distinct from psychometric and clinimetric. To validate an idiometric measure, one would document that its items reflect different circumstances and population characteristics, and explain variance in QOL. The present work sought to develop idiometric short-forms of the QOLAPv2 item bank by examining which items were most informative, retaining the appraisal-domain structure.MethodsThis secondary analysis (n = 1481) included chronically-ill patients and their caregivers from a longitudinal web-based survey (mean follow-up 16.6 months). Data included the QOLAPv2, the Center for Disease Control Healthy Days Core Module, the PROMIS-10 Global Health, and demographic/medical variables. Appraisal items were measured at baseline (relevant to understanding cognitive appraisal processes); and with change scores (sensitive to response-shift effects). Multivariate analysis of covariance examined what demographic and health-status change variables were reflected by each of 85 appraisal items (in five sets), as dependent variables, and other demographic/medical variables. Multiple linear regression examined how appraisal items explained variance in global physical- and mental-health change, after covariate adjustment. A tally summarized item performance across all five sets of cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses.ResultsThe vast majority (i.e., 80%) of the QOLAPv2 items performed well across the analyses presented. Using a relatively strict criterion of explaining meaningful variance across 60% of analyses, one would retain 68 items. A more lenient criterion (40%) would retain 71.ConclusionsThe present study provides heuristics to support investigators’ creating ‘discretionary’ QOLAPv2 short-forms to fit their study aim and amplifying individual differences in the cognitive processes underlying QOL. This approach enables adapting the measure to the study population, as per the expectation that respondent populations differ in the predominant cognitive processes used.

Highlights

  • The Rapkin and Schwartz appraisal theory and measure provided a path toward documenting response-shift effects and describing individual differences in ways of thinking about quality of life (QOL) that distinguished people in different circumstances

  • Interested readers are referred to an indepth treatment of appraisal inter-item correlations across many populations, which provided the foundation for the “idiometric” distinction [25]

  • In the regressions, appraisal items were more narrowly considered because they were tested only for their predictive power in accounting for a single dependent variable. Since this idiometric measure [25] is intended to amplify individual differences in the cognitive processes underlying QOL, and respondent populations are expected to differ in the range and predominant cognitive processes used, it would make sense that short forms of the QOL Appraisal Profileversion 2 (QOLAPv2) would be chosen to vary by study population

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Summary

Introduction

The Rapkin and Schwartz appraisal theory and measure provided a path toward documenting response-shift effects and describing individual differences in ways of thinking about quality of life (QOL) that distinguished people in different circumstances. Recent work developed and validated the QOL Appraisal Profileversion 2 (QOLAPv2), an 85-item measure that taps response-shift-detection domains of Frame of Reference, Standards of Comparison, Sampling of Experience, and Combinatory Algorithm. Building on Tourangeau’s [15] theoretical and empirical work on the psychology of survey response, the Rapkin and Schwartz appraisal theory and initial measure provided a path toward documenting responseshift effects [2, 3, 16], and describing the differences in ways of thinking about QOL and patterns of emphasis that distinguished people who fared better or worse with chronic medical conditions such as human immunodeficiency virus [7], multiple sclerosis [17], bladder cancer [18], and spinal disorders [19]. Changes in Standards of Comparison reflect recalibration; changes in Sampling of Experience and/or Combinatory Algorithm reflect reprioritization; and changes in Frame of Reference reflect reconceptualization [2]

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