Abstract

BackgroundProspective assessments of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) changes are prone to response shift effects when patients reconceptualize, reprioritize, or recalibrate the perceived meanings of OHRQoL test items. If this occurs, OHRQoL measurements are not “invariant” and may reflect changes in problem profiles or perceptions of OHRQoL test items. This suggests that response shift effects must be measured and controlled to achieve valid prospective OHRQoL measurement. The aim of this study was to quantify response shift effects of Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP) scores in prospective studies of prosthodontic patients.MethodsData came from the Dimensions of Oral Health-Related Quality of Life Project. The final sample included 554 patients who completed the OHIP questionnaire on two occasions: pre- and post-treatment. Only items that compose the 14-item OHIP were analyzed. Structural equation models that included pre- and post-treatment latent factors of OHRQoL with different across-occasion constraints for factor loadings, intercepts, and residual variances were fit to the data using confirmatory factor analysis.ResultsData fit both the unconstrained model (RMSEA = .038, SRMR = .051, CFI = .92, TLI = .91) and the partially constrained model with freed residual variances (RMSEA = .037, SRMR = .064, CFI = .92, TLI = .92) well, meaning that the data are well approximated by a one-factor model at each occasion, and suggesting strong factorial across-occasion measurement invariance.ConclusionsThe results provided cogent evidence for the absence of response shift in single factor OHIP models, indicating that longitudinal OHIP assessments of OHRQoL measure similar constructs across occasions.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12955-016-0492-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Prospective assessments of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) changes are prone to response shift effects when patients reconceptualize, reprioritize, or recalibrate the perceived meanings of OHRQoL test items

  • Characteristics of participants A total of 554 prosthodontic patients with valid data for baseline (Time 1) and follow-up (Time 2) assessments were included in our analyses (Table 1)

  • Longitudinal measurement invariance of the Oral Health Impact Profile (OHIP) was assessed with structural equation models (SEM) to elucidate potential changes in acrossoccasion measurement models of OHRQoL

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Summary

Introduction

Prospective assessments of oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) changes are prone to response shift effects when patients reconceptualize, reprioritize, or recalibrate the perceived meanings of OHRQoL test items. If this occurs, OHRQoL measurements are not “invariant” and may reflect changes in problem profiles or perceptions of OHRQoL test items. Recalibration occurs when patients revise their internal standards of measurement If any of these changes in the measurement model occurs, differences in perceived OHRQoL after treatment may reflect both changes in symptom profiles and changes in how patients perceive OHRQoL test items

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