| Literature DB >> 31707635 |
Roxanne M Parslow1, Alison Shaw2, Kirstie L Haywood3, Esther Crawley4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a lack of patient derived, child specific outcome measures to capture what health outcomes are important to children with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/ Myalgic Encephalopathy (CFS/ME). We developed a new Patient Reported Outcome Measure (PROM) for paediatric CFS/ME through qualitative research with children. This study aimed to pre-test the new measure through cognitive interviews with children with CFS/ME.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Chronic fatigue syndrome/ Myalgic encephalopathy (CFS/ME); Cognitive interviews; Patient reported outcome measure (PROM); Qualitative; Three step test interview (TSTI)
Year: 2019 PMID: 31707635 PMCID: PMC6842364 DOI: 10.1186/s41687-019-0156-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Rep Outcomes ISSN: 2509-8020
Extract of cognitive probes from topic guide
| Cognitive/ Questionnaire Component | Interview Probe |
|---|---|
| Follow up on observations | Why did you pause on this question? |
| Comprehension/ Items | What does [item content] mean to you? |
| Retrieval/ Timeframe | What did you remember when you read this question? |
| Judgement | Describe your experiences with [concept] over the (timeframe). |
| Response | How did you select your [response option?] |
| Overall feedback | Are there things that we forgot to ask about that you think are important? What do you think about the questionnaire? |
Fig. 1Rounds of cognitive interviewing
Reasons for changing items during pre-testing (Adapted from [17])
| Item Property | Reasons for change or deletion |
|---|---|
| Clarity of relevance | • Not relevant to a large number of the participants • Large amounts of requests for clarification from participants • Participants interpret items in a different way than intended by the conceptual framework |
| Response range | • High number of participants response at extreme ends of the scale • Participants feedback that the none of the response options apply to them |
| Variability | • All participants give the same answer • Participants do not give different responses even when important differences are known |
| Redundancy | • Item duplicates information collected from other items |
Participants taking part in cognitive interviews
| Child I.D | Gender | Age at interview | Interviewed alone/parent present | Interviewed at home or Skype | Sub domains covered |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CI1 | Female | 14 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI2 | Female | 17 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI3 | Female | 15 | Alone | Home | 4/6 |
| CI4 | Female | 16 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI5 | Female | 16 | Alone | Skype | All |
| CI6 | Female | 12 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI7 | Male | 11 | Parent present | Home | 3/6 |
| CI8 | Male | 16 | Alone | Skype | All |
| CI9 | Male | 17 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI10 | Female | 8 | Parent present | Home | 3/6 |
| CI11 | Male | 14 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI12 | Male | 10 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI13 | Female | 17 | Alone | Skype | 3/6 |
| CI14 | Female | 17 | Alone | Skype | All |
| CI15 | Male | 16 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI16 | Female | 14 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI17 | Male | 12 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI18 | Male | 18 | Alone | Skype | All |
| CI19 | Male | 10 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI20 | Female | 11 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI21 | Male | 11 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI22 | Female | 14 | Parent present | Home | All |
| CI23 | Female | 11 | Alone | Home | All |
| CI24 | Male | 10 | Parent present | Home | 2/6 |