Abstract

BackgroundTo test the ease of use, reliability, responsiveness and construct validity of the Patient Generated Index, an individualised quality of life score, in older people attending a Medicine for Older People Day Hospital.MethodsProspective longitudinal study in patients attending a specialist Medicine for Older People Day Hospital in Scotland. The Patient Generated Index was administered at baseline, one week later, and at the end of Day Hospital attendance. Functional Limitations Profile, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Score, Barthel index and global subjective impressions of change were also collected and compared with baseline scores and change in Patient Generated Index scores. Reliability was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficients in subjects reporting no change in global quality of life; responsiveness was assessed using effect size and Guyatt coefficients in subjects reporting change in global quality of life. External validity was assessed via correlation with measures of physical function, comorbid disease and psychological state.Results75 patients were enrolled, mean age 81 years. Mean completion time was 5.0 minutes at baseline. Reliability was moderate (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.72) but there were weak and inconsistent responses to change (effect sizes 0.02 to 0.15; Guyatt responsiveness coefficient 0.29). Patient Generated Index scores correlated with Functional Limitation Profile scores (r = 0.51, p < 0.001), baseline anxiety score (r = -0.25, P = 0.039) and baseline depression score (r = -0.37, P = 0.002) but displayed only weak, non-significant correlation with number of comorbid diseases (r = -0.22, P = 0.07), number of medications (r = -0.21, P = 0.08) and Barthel score (r = 0.09, p = 0.45).ConclusionThe Patient Generated Index appears moderately reliable and easy to complete, but is poorly responsive to change, limiting its usefulness in clinical practice or research.

Highlights

  • To test the ease of use, reliability, responsiveness and construct validity of the Patient Generated Index, an individualised quality of life score, in older people attending a Medicine for Older People Day Hospital

  • We report the results of a study designed to test the acceptability, reliability, responsiveness and validity of an individualised quality of life tool – the Patient Generated Index – in a cohort of older patients attending a Medicine for the Elderly Day Hospital

  • This study has shown that the interviewer-administered Patient Generated Index (PGI) can be completed by the majority of older patients without significant cognitive impairment attending a Medicine for the Elderly Day Hospital

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Summary

Introduction

To test the ease of use, reliability, responsiveness and construct validity of the Patient Generated Index, an individualised quality of life score, in older people attending a Medicine for Older People Day Hospital. Quality of life is regarded as a key healthcare outcome by patients and by clinicians; both groups see improvement in quality of life as an important function of Medicine for. Whilst it is generally thought that health is an important determinant of overall quality of life, and that health services are best placed to address only this aspect of quality of life, such a compartmentalised approach is at odds with the holistic ethos of health and social care that is central to the activities of Day Hospitals for older people. The Patient Generated Index (PGI) is such a tool, deriving in part from the hypothesis that quality of life can be depicted as the fit between expectation and reality at a given time [5]

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