Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing
Peasgood T, Mukuria C, Brazier J, Marten O, Kreimeier S, Luo N, Mulhern B, Greiner W, Pickard AS, Augustovski F, Engel L, et al. (2022)
Value in Health 25(4): 525-533.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Peasgood, Tessa;
Mukuria, Clara;
Brazier, John;
Marten, OleUniBi ;
Kreimeier, SimoneUniBi ;
Luo, Nan;
Mulhern, Brendan;
Greiner, WolfgangUniBi;
Pickard, A. Simon;
Augustovski, Federico;
Engel, Lidia;
Gibbons, Luz
Alle
Alle
Einrichtung
Abstract / Bemerkung
**Objectives**
The development of measures such as the EQ Health and Wellbeing requires selection of items. This study explored the psychometric performance of candidate items, testing their validity in patients, social carer users, and carers. **Methods**
Article and online surveys that included candidate items (N = 64) were conducted in Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, United Kingdom, and the United States. Psychometric assessment on missing data, response distributions, and known group differences was undertaken. Dimensionality was explored using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. Poorly fitting items were identified using information functions, and the function of each response category was assessed using category characteristic curves from item response theory (IRT) models. Differential item functioning was tested across key subgroups. **Results**
There were 4879 respondents (Argentina = 508, Australia = 514, China = 497, Germany = 502, United Kingdom = 1955, United States = 903). Where missing data were allowed, it was low (UK article survey 2.3%; US survey 0.6%). Most items had responses distributed across all levels. Most items could discriminate between groups with known health conditions with moderate to large effect sizes. Items were less able to discriminate across carers. Factor analysis found positive and negative measurement factors alongside the constructs of interest. For most of the countries apart from China, the confirmatory factor analysis model had good fit with some minor modifications. IRT indicated that most items had well-functioning response categories but there was some evidence of differential item functioning in many items. **Conclusions**
Items performed well in classical psychometric testing and IRT. This large 6-country collaboration provided evidence to inform item selection for the EQ Health and Wellbeing measure.
The development of measures such as the EQ Health and Wellbeing requires selection of items. This study explored the psychometric performance of candidate items, testing their validity in patients, social carer users, and carers. **Methods**
Article and online surveys that included candidate items (N = 64) were conducted in Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, United Kingdom, and the United States. Psychometric assessment on missing data, response distributions, and known group differences was undertaken. Dimensionality was explored using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis. Poorly fitting items were identified using information functions, and the function of each response category was assessed using category characteristic curves from item response theory (IRT) models. Differential item functioning was tested across key subgroups. **Results**
There were 4879 respondents (Argentina = 508, Australia = 514, China = 497, Germany = 502, United Kingdom = 1955, United States = 903). Where missing data were allowed, it was low (UK article survey 2.3%; US survey 0.6%). Most items had responses distributed across all levels. Most items could discriminate between groups with known health conditions with moderate to large effect sizes. Items were less able to discriminate across carers. Factor analysis found positive and negative measurement factors alongside the constructs of interest. For most of the countries apart from China, the confirmatory factor analysis model had good fit with some minor modifications. IRT indicated that most items had well-functioning response categories but there was some evidence of differential item functioning in many items. **Conclusions**
Items performed well in classical psychometric testing and IRT. This large 6-country collaboration provided evidence to inform item selection for the EQ Health and Wellbeing measure.
Stichworte
EQ-HWB;
EQ Health and Wellbeing;
health and wellbeing;
item selection;
item response theory;
measurement development;
psychometrics;
quality-adjusted life-year
Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Zeitschriftentitel
Value in Health
Band
25
Ausgabe
4
Seite(n)
525-533
ISSN
1098-3015
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2961847
Zitieren
Peasgood T, Mukuria C, Brazier J, et al. Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Value in Health. 2022;25(4):525-533.
Peasgood, T., Mukuria, C., Brazier, J., Marten, O., Kreimeier, S., Luo, N., Mulhern, B., et al. (2022). Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Value in Health, 25(4), 525-533. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jval.2021.11.1361
Peasgood, Tessa, Mukuria, Clara, Brazier, John, Marten, Ole, Kreimeier, Simone, Luo, Nan, Mulhern, Brendan, et al. 2022. “Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing”. Value in Health 25 (4): 525-533.
Peasgood, T., Mukuria, C., Brazier, J., Marten, O., Kreimeier, S., Luo, N., Mulhern, B., Greiner, W., Pickard, A. S., Augustovski, F., et al. (2022). Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Value in Health 25, 525-533.
Peasgood, T., et al., 2022. Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Value in Health, 25(4), p 525-533.
T. Peasgood, et al., “Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing”, Value in Health, vol. 25, 2022, pp. 525-533.
Peasgood, T., Mukuria, C., Brazier, J., Marten, O., Kreimeier, S., Luo, N., Mulhern, B., Greiner, W., Pickard, A.S., Augustovski, F., Engel, L., Gibbons, L., Yang, Z., Monteiro, A.L., Kuharic, M., Belizan, M., Bjørner, J.: Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Value in Health. 25, 525-533 (2022).
Peasgood, Tessa, Mukuria, Clara, Brazier, John, Marten, Ole, Kreimeier, Simone, Luo, Nan, Mulhern, Brendan, Greiner, Wolfgang, Pickard, A. Simon, Augustovski, Federico, Engel, Lidia, Gibbons, Luz, Yang, Zhihao, Monteiro, Andrea L., Kuharic, Maja, Belizan, Maria, and Bjørner, Jakob. “Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ Health and Wellbeing”. Value in Health 25.4 (2022): 525-533.
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