Abstract

BackgroundA critical component that influences the measurement properties of a patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument is the rating scale. Yet, there is a lack of general consensus regarding optimal rating scale format, including aspects of question structure, the number and the labels of response categories. This study aims to explore the characteristics of rating scales that function well and those that do not, and thereby develop guidelines for formulating rating scales.MethodsSeventeen existing PROs designed to measure vision-related quality of life dimensions were mailed for self-administration, in sets of 10, to patients who were on a waiting list for cataract extraction. These PROs included questions with ratings of difficulty, frequency, severity, and global ratings. Using Rasch analysis, performance of rating scales were assessed by examining hierarchical ordering (indicating categories are distinct from each other and follow a logical transition from lower to higher value), evenness (indicating relative utilization of categories), and range (indicating coverage of the attribute by the rating scale).ResultsThe rating scales with complicated question format, a large number of response categories, or unlabelled categories, tended to be dysfunctional. Rating scales with five or fewer response categories tended to be functional. Most of the rating scales measuring difficulty performed well. The rating scales measuring frequency and severity demonstrated hierarchical ordering but the categories lacked even utilization.ConclusionDevelopers of PRO instruments should use a simple question format, fewer (four to five) and labelled response categories.

Highlights

  • A critical component that influences the measurement properties of a patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument is the rating scale

  • Questionnaires A systematic literature search was performed for PROs that were used to measure the impact of cataract and/or outcomes of cataract surgery on a polytomous rating scale in Entrez PubMed

  • Six hundred and fourteen patients completed at least one PRO instrument

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Summary

Introduction

A critical component that influences the measurement properties of a patient-reported outcome (PRO) instrument is the rating scale. It is critical that data collected by PROs are accurate and reliable, which is only possible when patients are able to understand the questions asked and select response categories that represent their status. The term rating scale generally refers to the response options that can be selected for a question or statement in a PRO instrument [7,8]. These are usually a set of categories defined by descriptive labels: rating scale categories. Rating scale design should consider aspects of both the question format and the response categories

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