| Literature DB >> 29188584 |
Helen McConachie1,2, David Mason3, Jeremy R Parr4, Deborah Garland5, Colin Wilson6, Jacqui Rodgers4.
Abstract
Accurate measurement of quality of life (QoL) is important for evaluation of autism services and trials of interventions. We undertook psychometric validation of the World Health Organisation measure-WHOQoL-BREF, examined construct validity of the WHO Disabilities module and developed nine additional autism-specific items (ASQoL) from extensive consultation with the autism community. The sample of 309 autistic people was recruited from the Adult Autism Spectrum Cohort-UK. The WHOQoL-BREF had good psychometric properties, including criterion, convergent, divergent and discriminant validity. The WHO Disabilities module showed adequate construct validity and reliability. The ASQoL items form a unitary factor of QoL, with one global item. Future studies can use the WHO measures alongside the ASQoL items to measure QoL of autistic people.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Measurement properties; Public mental health; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29188584 PMCID: PMC5889785 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-017-3402-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Fig. 1Flowchart for the item development stage of the study
Finalised ASQoL items after two rounds of the Delphi survey and consultations
| 1. Do you have enough support from others to make important decisions? |
| 2. Can you ‘be yourself’ around your friends/people you know well? |
| 3. How secure do you feel about your financial situation? |
| 4. Do you have enough support in your life, if or when you need it, to help you deal with problems? |
| 5. Are you satisfied with your current friendships? |
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a6. Do you feel there are barriers when accessing health services? |
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a7. Do sensory issues in the environment make it difficult to do things you want to do? |
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a8. Do you feel there are barriers to your needs being met in ‘official’ situations (e.g. at the benefit’s office, at work, with your landlord, etc.)? |
| 9G. Are you at ease (OK) with ‘Autism’ as an aspect of your identity? |
Items and scoring can be freely downloaded from http://research.ncl.ac.uk/cargo-ne/measures.html
aIndicates item is to be reverse scored; G indicates a global QoL item
Characteristics and demographic details of the validation sample (n = 309)
| Age | Range | Mean age | Standard deviation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 18–76 | 42.96 | 13.78 |
| Male | 18–76 | 45.71 | 14.92 |
| Female | 20–71 | 40.80 | 12.15 |
Means and standard deviations for the present sample and normative data, with effect sizes. Proportions of the participants within, above, and below one standard deviation of normative values for the WHOQoL-BREF and WHO Disabilities module
| Data source (n) | Physical | Psychological | Social | Environment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WHOQoL-BREF | ||||
| Validation data (306) | 54.00 (22.74)* | 43.89 (20.13)* | 41.77 (22.82)* | 56.19 (19.49)* |
| Normative (1324–1328) | 76.49 (16.19)* | 67.82 (15.56)* | 70.52 (20.67)* | 68.20 (13.81)* |
| Cohen’s d | 1.14 | 1.33 | 1.32 | 0.71 |
*Indicates a significant difference between the present sample and normative data, all p < 0.001
aComparison values are taken from Skevington and McCrate (2012)
bDomain scores were computed by pooling item level mean, standard deviation, and sample size data taken from Power and Green (2010) before calculating proportions
Correlations between the WHOQoL-BREF domains and measures used to assess validity
| Physical | Psychological | Social | Environmental | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Psychological QoL | 0.670*** | – | ||
| Social QoL | 0.326*** | 0.537*** | – | |
| Environment QoL | 0.713*** | 0.669*** | 0.418*** | – |
| HADS depression | − 0.635*** | − | − 0.467*** | − 0.590*** |
| HADS anxiety | − 0.580*** | − | − 0.305*** | − 0.539*** |
| CHIEF-SF | − 0.670*** | − 0.465*** | − 0.265*** | − |
| ISEL-12 | 0.315*** | 0.455*** |
| 0.500*** |
| COMQOL importance | − 0.012 | 0.215*** | 0.115* | 0.029 |
| COMQOL satisfaction | 0.682*** | 0.792*** | 0.590*** | 0.724*** |
Correlations in bold are those hypothesised to be strongest
HADS Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, CHIEF-SF Craig Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors—Short Form, ISEL-12 Interpersonal Support Evaluation List-12, COMQOL Comprehensive Quality of Life questionnaire—Adult version
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001
Means and standard deviations for each QoL domain score related to HADS subscale score cut-offs. MANOVA effect sizes and post hoc comparisons are included
| WHOQoL-BREF domains | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical QoL | Psychological QoL | Social QoL | Environment QoL | |
| HADS depression | ||||
| Normal range | 66.78 (19.92)* | 57.62 (16.47)* | 53.07 (19.96)a,b | 65.63 (17.38)* |
| Borderline | 53.25 (16.34)* | 42.90 (12.42)* | 36.17 (21.67)a | 55.13 (15.85)* |
| Presence | 37.94 (18.87)* | 26.73 (13.79)* | 30.49 (20.13)b | 44.61 (17.66)* |
| Partial eta squared |
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| HADS anxiety | ||||
| Normal range | 76.88 (14.97)* | 65.10 (17.20)* | 51.24 (19.58)a | 71.46 (15.32)* |
| Borderline | 61.31 (20.39)* | 48.80 (16.46)* | 45.67 (22.11) | 62.95 (15.45)* |
| Presence | 46.40 (20.54)* | 37.40 (17.84)* | 38.36 (23.01)a | 50.55 (18.92)* |
| Partial eta squared |
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| 0.05 |
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For post hoc comparisons: for each domain score each matching superscript letter indicates significant difference for each pair of values labelled with the same letter
*Indicates all pairings significantly different
Partial eta squared = 0.01 for a small effect, 0.06 for a medium effect, and 0.13 for a large effect