| Literature DB >> 21974842 |
Tore Wentzel-Larsen1, Tone M Norekvål, Bjørg Ulvik, Ottar Nygård, Are H Pripp.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Questionnaires are used extensively in medical and health care research and depend on validity and reliability. However, participants may differ in interest and awareness throughout long questionnaires, which can affect reliability of their answers. A method is proposed for "screening" of systematic change in random error, which could assess changed reliability of answers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21974842 PMCID: PMC3203093 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-11-137
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Res Methodol ISSN: 1471-2288 Impact factor: 4.615
Figure 1Proposed method to detect change in reliability throughout questionnaires. The flow chart shows the steps of the proposed method. The slope between ICC and item number is proposed as a measure to detect change in reliability. A negative slope indicates increased random error and poorer reliability and a positive slope indicates decreased random error and improved reliability. This slope is our awareness measure (see Table 1 and Figure 3)
Figure 2Assumptions in the simulation study. The sources of variance are assumed due to an underlying factor (fi) and random error (eit). Increased random error represents poorer reliability. Total variance, Var(Yit), is standardized to 1.0 before estimation of the awareness measure.
Estimated awareness measure (AM) in a clinical dataset using the Jalowiec Coping Scale.
| Scale | # Items | Resp. | N | AM (95% BCa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Confrontivea | 10 | 639 | 563 | 0.0030 (-0.0002, 0.0096) |
| Evasivea | 13 | 642 | 541 | 0.0020 (0.0012, 0.0057) |
| Optimistica | 9 | 643 | 577 | 0.0077 (0.0059, 0.0115) |
| Self-relianta | 7 | 637 | 573 | 0.0001 (-0.0051, 0.0059) |
| Confrontiveb | 12 | 642 | 549 | 0.0018 (-0.0026, 0.0038) |
| Normalising optimisticb | 10 | 640 | 582 | 0.0098 (0.0055, 0.0138) |
| Combined emotiveb | 9 | 646 | 590 | -0.0038 (-0.0069, -0.0004) |
# Items: Number of items in selected factor structure. Resp.: Number of the 753 respondents completing at least one item in the scale. N: Number of respondents completing all items in the scale - the analyses are based on these. AM: Awareness measure.
a Jalowiec's original scale.
b Wahl's alternative factor structure [12].
Figure 3Results from the simulation study. The boxplots of estimated awareness measures from simulated data to detect change in reliability are expressed as random error. Number of simulations for each set of condition is 10000. Estimations of the awareness measure are done under scenarios with different values of a, b and q (see Figure 2). The number of subjects is 600.