| Literature DB >> 24921608 |
Ashutosh N Aggarwal1, Ritesh Agarwal1, Dheeraj Gupta1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is no disease-specific instrument to describe health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in Indian patients with asthma. However, an abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life questionnaire (WHOQOL-Bref), a generic Hindi HRQoL measure, has been developed and validated in India. AIMS: To evaluate the WHOQOL-Bref in adult patients with asthma and to test possible modifications to the instrument to improve its psychometric adequacy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24921608 PMCID: PMC4373256 DOI: 10.1038/npjpcrm.2014.1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Individual items in the WHOQOL-Bref questionnaire
| 1. Overall quality of health rating | 14. Leisure activity opportunity |
| 2. Satisfaction with health | 15. Ability to get around |
| 3. Pain prevents doing work | 16. Satisfaction with sleep |
| 4. Need for medical treatment | 17. Daily living activities |
| 5. Enjoyment in life | 18. Capacity for work |
| 6. Life meaningful | 19. Satisfaction with oneself |
| 7. Concentration | 20. Personal relationships |
| 8. Safety in daily life | 21. Satisfaction with sex life |
| 9. Healthy physical environment | 22. Support from friends |
| 10. Energy for everyday life | 23. Conditions of living place |
| 11. Bodily appearance | 24. Access to health services |
| 12. Money to meet needs | 25. Means of transportation |
| 13. Availability of information | 26. Negative feelings |
WHOQOL-Bref domains:
physical
psychological
social relationships
environment
Abbreviation: WHOQOL-Bref, abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life.
Performance of WHOQOL-Bref before and after modification
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| Person-separation index | 0.740 | 0.663 | 0.693 | 0.721 |
| Item–trait interaction | ||||
| Chi-square | 33.484 | 16.582 | 6.633 | 19.542 |
| | 0.002 | 0.166 | 0.356 | 0.242 |
| Mean (s.d.) location estimates | ||||
| Item (centralised) | 0.000 (0.608) | 0.000 (0.586) | 0.000 (0.854) | 0.000 (0.422) |
| Person | 1.202 (1.009) | 0.476 (0.986) | 1.049 (1.633) | 0.458 (0.856) |
| Mean (s.d.) fit residual | ||||
| Item | 0.336 (1.439) | 0.364 (1.091) | −0.064 (0.670) | 0.134 (0.735) |
| Person | −0.438 (1.447) | −0.160 (0.866) | −0.674 (1.089) | −0.495 (1.518) |
| Person-separation index | 0.774 | 0.680 | 0.672 | 0.716 |
| Item–trait interaction | ||||
| Chi-square | 10.336 | 17.054 | 7.377 | 17.340 |
| | 0.587 | 0.148 | 0.287 | 0.364 |
| Mean (s.d.) location estimates | ||||
| Item (centralised) | 0.000 (0.622) | 0.000 (1.025) | 0.000 (0.218) | 0.000 (0.643) |
| Person | 0.449 (1.284) | 0.146 (1.131) | 0.559 (1.635) | 0.174 (1.018) |
| Mean (s.d.) fit residual | ||||
| Item | 0.205 (1.666) | 0.357 (0.984) | 0.104 (0.431) | 0.272 (0.836) |
| Person | −0.464 (1.333) | −0.170 (0.920) | −0.740 (1.238) | −0.340 (1.311) |
Abbreviation: WHOQOL-Bref, abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life.
Figure 1Graphical exploration of differential item functioning for item 18 (capacity for work) of the abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life. The dashed line corresponds to the item characteristic curve representing the expected probability of item endorsement as a function of person ability. Superimposed plots represent the observed responses by patients of either gender (left panel), different age groups (middle panel) and different levels of asthma control (right panel). For each analysis, patients were divided into three approximately equal groups according to their health-related quality of life. Individual plots for each analysis lie close to each other, with no obvious dissimilarities. Group differences were also statistically non-significant on formal analysis of variance testing, suggesting that item response functions were largely invariant across categories.
Figure 2Example of category probability curves. The top panel for item 12 (money to meet needs) of the abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life reveals disordered and reversed thresholds. There is no point on the continuum where response categories 2 or 4 are the most likely responses. Threshold locations (corresponding to points of intersection between probability curves of two adjacent response categories) between response 1 or 2 and 2 or 3, and between 3 or 4 and 4 or 5, are reversed. The bottom panel shows the curves redrawn after rescoring category structure (collapsing categories 1 and 2, and 4 and 5). After this merger, the three response categories for this item are well ordered and distributed, with persons with higher ability (or better quality of life) having a progressively greater probability of endorsing a higher response category.
Figure 3Person-item distribution maps for various domains of the abbreviated World Health Organization Quality of Life (WHOQOL-Bref) after rescoring categories. The vertical line represents the measure of the variable in linear logit units. In each panel, the right-hand column locates questionnaire item threshold difficulty measures along the variable. Each entry is indicated by its number in the original questionnaire (see Table 1), followed by the threshold after the decimal point. For instance, the location 04.3 refers to the difficulty calibration estimate of the third threshold (i.e., threshold between the third and fourth response category) of the fourth questionnaire item. The left-hand column locates the patients’ ability measure along the variable, with each plus sign representing 10 patients and each circle representing one patient. From bottom to top, measures indicate better health-related quality of life (for patients) and greater difficulty (for items).