Abstract

ObjectiveThe first aim of this study was to develop a Rasch-based crosswalk between 2 postconcussive symptom measures, the Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory (NSI) and the Rivermead Postconcussive Symptom Questionnaire (RPQ). The second goal was to utilize Rasch analysis to formulate a new proposed scale containing the best theoretical and psychometric items. DesignProspective cohort observational study. SettingThree acute inpatient rehabilitation hospitals in the United States. ParticipantsCommunity-dwelling persons (N=497) who were previously hospitalized and were diagnosed with mild to severe traumatic brain injury. Participants were (1) 18-64 years old; (2) could give informed consent; (3) able to complete study measures in English; (4) did not have an interfering medical or psychiatric condition. InterventionsNot applicable. Main Outcome MeasuresNSI, RPQ. ResultsRasch analysis revealed 4 subdimensions across the 2 scales: cognitive, affective, physical, and visual. Crosswalk tables were generated for the first 3. Visual items were too few to generate a crosswalk. Iterative Rasch analysis produced a new scale with items rated from none to severe including the best items in each of these dimensions. ConclusionsThe NSI and RPQ have considerable overlap and measure the same overarching constructs. Crosswalk tables may be helpful for clinicians and researchers to convert scores from 1 measure to the other. A more psychometrically sound scale, the Brain Injury Symptom Scale, composed of items from the NSI and RPQ, is proposed and will need further validation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call