| Literature DB >> 30820556 |
Catrin Griffiths1, Ella Guest1, Timothy Pickles2, Linda Hollén3, Mariusz Grzeda3, Paul White4, Philippa Tollow1, Diana Harcourt1.
Abstract
Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) identify vital information about patient needs and therapeutic progress. This paper outlines the development and validation of the CARe Burn Scale-Adult Form: a PROM that assesses quality of life in adults living with a burn injury. Eleven patients, 10 family members and 4 health professional interviews, and a systematic review informed the development of a conceptual framework and a draft measure. Cognitive debriefing interviews conducted with three adult burn patients, one family member, and eight health professionals provided feedback to ascertain content validity of the measure. The measure was then field tested with 304 adult burn patients. Rasch psychometric analysis was conducted for scale reduction, and traditional psychometric analyses provided a comparison with other measures. Further psychometric testing with an additional 118 adult burn patients tested the shortened CARe Burn Scale in relation to other quality of life PROMs. The conceptual framework outlined 14 domains; 12 of which fulfilled Rasch and traditional psychometric analyses. Two individual scales did not fulfill the Rasch criteria and were retained as checklists. Individual CARe Burn Scales correlated moderately-to-highly with other quality of life scales measuring similar constructs, and had low-to-no correlations with dissimilar constructs and the majority of sociodemographic factors, indicating evidence of concurrent and divergent validity. The CARe Burn Scale-Adult Form can help identify patient needs and provides burns-specialist health professionals with a tool to assess quality of life and therapeutic progress after a burn event and related treatment. © American Burn Association 2019. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30820556 DOI: 10.1093/jbcr/irz021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Burn Care Res ISSN: 1559-047X Impact factor: 1.845