Abstract

Content validity is a fundamental requirement of outcome measures. After reviewing operational needs and existing definitions, content validity we as defined as: the extent to which a measure provides a comprehensive and true assessment of the key relevant elements of a specified construct or attribute across a defined range, clearly and equitably for a stated target audience and context. ICF linkage rules from 2002, 2005, and 2019 have provide increasingly clear processes for describing and evaluating content of outcome measures. ICF Core Sets provide international reference standards of the core constructs of importance for different health conditions. Both are important as reference standards during content validation. To summarize their use as reference standards, the following summary indicators were proposed: (1) Measure to ICF linkage, (2) Measure to (Brief or Comprehensive) Core Set Absolute Linkage, (3) Measure to (Brief or Comprehensive) Core Set Unique Linkage, (4) Core Set Representation, and (5) Core Set Unique Disability Representation. Methods to assess how respondents engage with content are needed to complement ICF-linking. Cognitive interviewing is an ideal method since it used to explore how respondents interpret and calibrate response to individual items on an outcome measure. We proposed a framework for classifying these responses: Clarity/Comprehension, Relevance, Inadequate response definition, Reference Point, Perspective modification, and Calibration Across Items. Our analysis of 24 manuscripts that used ICF linking for content validation since updated linking rules were published found that authors typically used linking to validate existing measures, involved multiple raters, used 2005 linking rules, summarized content at a concept level (e.g., impairment, activity, participation) and/or use core sets as a reference standard. Infrequently, ICF linking was used to create item pools/conceptual frameworks for new measures, applied the full scope of the 2019 linking rules, used summary indicators, or integrated ICF-linking with qualitative methods like cognitive interviews. We conclude that ICF linkage is a powerful tool for content validity during development or validation of PROM. Best practices include use of updated ICF linking rules, triangulation of ICF linking with participant assessments of clarity and relevance preferably obtained using cognitive interview methods, and application of defined summary indicators.

Highlights

  • The issue of content validity of health outcome measures is the most critical, and most neglected area of clinical measurement science

  • Content validity is important for all health outcome measures and is especially complex to measure for patientreported outcome measures (PROM) since how potential respondents interact with items depends on a variety of factors related to the respondent e.g., age, language, culture, lifestyle, life experience, health; and factors related to the PROM e.g., content, clarity, and comprehensiveness

  • We provided definitions/classification to summarize sources of cognitive dissonance/interpretation errors derived from cognitive interviewing and simple statistics to summarize the results of ICF-linking to improve the consistency and interpretability of these methods in future content validity studies

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Summary

Introduction

The issue of content validity of health outcome measures is the most critical, and most neglected area of clinical measurement science. Content validity is important for all health outcome measures and is especially complex to measure for patientreported outcome measures (PROM) since how potential respondents interact with items depends on a variety of factors related to the respondent e.g., age, language, culture, lifestyle, life experience, health; and factors related to the PROM e.g., content, clarity, and comprehensiveness. Development of methods for content validation support more rigourous development of new PROM and evaluation of existing PROM. Progress in different aspects of content validity and ICF linking has been evident in recent years. For this reason, an integrated narrative review that focuses on methods for using ICF linking in content validation is one way to bring together emerging work with a view to greater clarity and rigor in content validity research. To describe previous content validity definitions and propose a more comprehensive operational definition

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