| Literature DB >> 31689328 |
Lenka Benova1,2, Ann-Beth Moller3, Allisyn C Moran4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A large number of indicators are currently used to monitor the state of maternal and newborn health, including those capturing dimensions of health system and input, care access and availability, care quality and safety, coverage and outcomes, and impact. Validity of these indicators is a key issue in the process of assessing indicator performance and suitability. This paper aims to understand the meaning of indicator validity in the field of maternal and newborn health, and to identify key recommendations for future research.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31689328 PMCID: PMC6830807 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224746
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Overview of research questions and key response themes.
| Questions | Key response themes |
|---|---|
| 1. What does the concept of “validity” of indicators mean to various stakeholders? | The meaning of indicator validity means different things to different people, including by different users, languages, and disciplinary backgrounds. |
| 2. What types of approaches are considered useful in assessing indicator validity? | 1. A notable change over time in the methods used to assess indicator validity from a focus on methods such as internal consistency, external consistency, reliability, and cognitive interviewing, toward a focus on diagnostic assessment of validity using a gold standard comparison. |
| 3. What is an acceptable level of indicator validity? | There is no objective or recommended cut-off point for a “good” level of diagnostic validity that could single-handedly inform a recommendation to endorse the use of an indicator. Such endorsement relies on additional considerations, such as the intended use of an indicator, quality of data and its source(s), and quality of the gold standard used to evaluate validity. |
| 4. What gaps exist in indicator validation work? | 4. Future studies should assess validity of quality of maternal and newborn care indicators, in particular indicators capturing the continuum of care from pregnancy to the postpartum period. Additionally, more work needs to be done on validating indicators derived from facilities and routine data sources. |
| 5. What are the recommendations for addressing these gaps? | 1. Better global coordination of validation studies to help avoid duplication of efforts and establish a common language and understanding of indicator validity among the various global and local stakeholders. |
Fig 1Three most common definitions of indicator validity (text boxes) within a conceptual map of four key indicator measurement concepts (hexagons).