| Literature DB >> 30105493 |
David C Buitenweg1,2, Ilja L Bongers3,4, Dike van de Mheen3,5, Hans A M van Oers3,6, Chijs van Nieuwenhuizen3,4.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Quality of life (QoL) is a broad outcome that is often used to assess the impact of treatment and care interventions in mental health services. QoL, however, is known to be influenced by individual values and preferences. To investigate this heterogeneity on the individual level, this study aimed to distinguish classes with distinct QoL profiles in a broad group of people with severe mental health problems and to identify the QoL domains that are most strongly related to the classes.Entities:
Keywords: Latent class analysis; People with severe mental health problems; Quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30105493 PMCID: PMC6208602 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-018-1964-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Study characteristics of the seven included studies
| Study | Sample size | Research design | LQoLP version |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proost [ | 116 | Cross-sectional | Original |
| Van Nieuwenhuizen et al. [ | 487 | Cross-sectional | Original |
| Barendregt et al. [ | 172 | Longitudinal | Extended |
| De Maeyer et al. [ | 159 | Cross-sectional | Extended |
| Bouman et al. [ | 135 | Cross-sectional | Extended |
| Harder et al. [ | 164 | Longitudinal | Extended |
| Van Nieuwenhuizen and Nijman [ | 44 | Cross-sectional | Extended |
Associations between the three latent classes and sociodemographic variables, health-related variables, and measures of well-being
| Variable | Class 1 ( | Class 2 ( | Class 3 ( | Statistica ( | Group differences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sociodemographic variables | |||||
| Mean age (SD) | 35.16 (14.7) | 35.18 (15.5) | 35.11 (14.6) |
| – |
| Male | 72.8% | 74.3% | 71.1% |
| – |
| Dutch nationality | 82.7% | 82.2% | 84.4% |
| – |
| Mean age for cessation of formal education (SD) | 15.88 (5.2) | 15.52 (6.3) | 16.21 (6.7) |
| – |
| Intimate relationship | 28.4% | 35.4% | 27.4% |
| – |
| Structured daily activities | 78.5% | 77.0% | 76.9% |
| – |
| Social benefit | 62.1% | 57.8% | 60.3 4 |
| – |
| Living alone | 28.8% | 29.8% | 30.3% |
| – |
| Unmarried | 74.4% | 76% | 76.9% |
| – |
| Health-related variables | |||||
| Saw a psychiatric care professional during the last year | 62% | 61.7% | 57.2% |
| – |
| Hospitalised for psychological complaints during the past year | 19% | 23.1% | 21% |
| – |
| Medication for psychological complaints during the last year | 59.5% | 59.4% | 57.4% |
| – |
| Admitted to psychiatric hospital/ward | 50.7% | 55% | 53.6% |
| – |
| Age at first admission to psychiatric hospital/ward (SD) | 25.3 (11.9) | 24.8 (12.2) | 25.4 (11.4) |
| – |
| Unable to gain professional help for health during past year | 76 (21.2%) | 72 (21.2%) | 122 (21.3%) |
| – |
| Measures of well-being | |||||
| Life satisfaction score (SD) | 4.17 (1.24) | 4.42 (1.22) | 4.33 (1.22) |
| 2 > 1 |
| Cantril’s ladder (SD) | 50.67 (23.4) | 57.61 (23.1) | 54.53 (22.7) |
| 2 > 1, 3 > 1 |
| Happiness scale (SD) | 2.89 (1) | 2.93 (1) | 2.95 (1) |
| – |
| Negative affect (SD) | 4.89 (1.96) | 4.53 (1.57) | 5.08 (1.65) |
| 2 < 1, 2 < 3 |
aDepending on the variable, an ANOVA (F), Chi-square test (χ2), or Kruskall–Wallis test (H) was used
Fit statistics for latent class models with 1–6 classes (N = 1277)
| Number of classes | BIC | Entropy | Vuong–Lo–Mendell–Rubin test |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 68,016.76 | ||
| 2 | 64,515.92 | 0.83 | 0.00 |
| 3 | 64,303.46 | 0.86 | 0.013 |
| 4 | 62,662.29 | 0.90 | 0.131 |
| 5 | 62,083.98 | 0.85 | 0.485 |
| 6 | 61,830.01 | 0.84 | 0.186 |
Fig. 1Mean LQoLP domain scores for the three classes identified with the LCA
LQoLP domain scores for the three classes
| LQoLP domain | Class 1 ( | Class 2 ( | Class 3 ( |
| Group differences |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Living situation (SD) | 4.38 (1.46) | 4.45 (1.53) | 4.91 (1.3) | 16.69* | 3 > 2,1 |
| Finances (SD) | 3.49 (1.31) | 4.3 (1.51) | 4.31 (1.31) | 46.7* | 3,2 > 1 |
| Family relations (SD) | 2.93 (1.05) | 5.88 (0.75) | 5.44 (0.85) | 1162.65* | 2 > 3 > 1 |
| Safety (SD) | 4.68 (1.23) | 5.81 (0.71) | 5.37 (0.92) | 113.44* | 2 > 3 > 1 |
| Leisure and social participation (SD) | 4.19 (1) | 5.33 (0.75) | 4.98 (0.85) | 160.8* | 2 > 3 > 1 |
| Health (SD) | 4.07 (0.98) | 5.33 (0.77) | 4.76 (0.88) | 176.44* | 2 > 3 > 1 |
| Fulfilment (SD) | 4.58 (0.92) | 5.83 (0.8) | 4.71 (0.73) | 264.1* | 2 > 3,1 |
| Framework (SD) | 5.26 (0.98) | 6.34 (0.77) | 5.01 (0.76) | 284.54* | 2 > 1 > 3 |
| Positive esteem (SD) | 5.54 (1.16) | 6.72 (0.49) | 5.02 (0.87) | 377.34* | 2 > 1 > 3 |
| Negative esteem (SD) | 4.01 (1.25) | 6.35 (0.85) | 4.08 (0.85) | 668.29* | 2 > 3,1 |
*p ≤ 0.001
Univariate entropy values for the ten LQoLP domains (N = 1277)
| Quality of life domain | Univariate entropy |
|---|---|
| Living situation | 0.041 |
| Finances | 0.056 |
| Family relations | 0.368 |
| Safety | 0.061 |
| Leisure and social participation | 0.131 |
| Health | 0.142 |
| Fulfilment | 0.180 |
| Framework | 0.198 |
| Positive self-esteem | 0.231 |
| Negative self-esteem | 0.366 |