Jan Gryczynski 1 , Courtney Nordeck 1 , Shannon Gwin Mitchell 1 , Kevin E O'Grady 2 , Jennifer McNeely 3 , Li-Tzy Wu 4 , Robert P Schwartz 1 . Show Affiliations »
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Self-report questions in substance use research and clinical screening often ask individuals to reflect on behaviors, symptoms, or events over a specified time period. However, there are different ways of phrasing conceptually similar time frames (eg, past year vs. past 12 months). METHODS: We conducted focused, abbreviated cognitive interviews with a sample of community health center patients (N = 50) to learn how they perceived and interpreted questions with alternative phrasing of similar time frames (past year vs. past 12 months; past month vs. past 30 days; past week vs. past 7 days). RESULTS: Most participants perceived the alternative time frames as identical. However, 28% suggested that the "past year" and "past 12 months" phrasings would elicit different responses by evoking distinct time periods and/or calling for different levels of recall precision. Different start and end dates for "past year" and "past 12 months" were reported by 20% of the sample. There were fewer discrepancies for shorter time frames. CONCLUSIONS: Use of "past 12 months" rather than "past year" as a time frame in self-report questions could yield more precise responses for a substantial minority of adult respondents. SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: Subtle differences in wording of conceptually similar time frames can affect the interpretation of self-report questions and the precision of responses. © American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.
BACKGROUND: Self-report questions in substance use research and clinical screening often ask individuals to reflect on behaviors, symptoms, or events over a specified time period. However, there are different ways of phrasing conceptually similar time frames (eg, past year vs. past 12 months). METHODS: We conducted focused, abbreviated cognitive interviews with a sample of community health center patients (N = 50) to learn how they perceived and interpreted questions with alternative phrasing of similar time frames (past year vs. past 12 months; past month vs. past 30 days; past week vs. past 7 days). RESULTS: Most participants perceived the alternative time frames as identical. However, 28% suggested that the "past year" and "past 12 months" phrasings would elicit different responses by evoking distinct time periods and/or calling for different levels of recall precision. Different start and end dates for "past year" and "past 12 months" were reported by 20% of the sample. There were fewer discrepancies for shorter time frames. CONCLUSIONS: Use of "past 12 months" rather than "past year" as a time frame in self-report questions could yield more precise responses for a substantial minority of adult respondents. SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: Subtle differences in wording of conceptually similar time frames can affect the interpretation of self-report questions and the precision of responses. © American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry.
Entities: Chemical
Disease
Species
Mesh: See more »
Year: 2015
PMID: 26541893 PMCID: PMC4902154 DOI: 10.1111/ajad.12305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Addict ISSN: 1055-0496