Patient-reported Outcomes, Value, and Experience (PROVE) Center, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, United States of America.
Department of Surgery, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Feb 13;14(2):e0206507. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0206507. eCollection 2019.
People living with serious mental health conditions experience increased morbidity due to physical health issues driven by medication side-effects and lifestyle factors. Coordinated mental and physical healthcare delivered in accordance with a care plan could help to reduce morbidity and mortality in this population. Efforts to develop new models of care are hampered by a lack of validated instruments to accurately assess the extent to which mental health services users and carers are involved in care planning for physical health.
To develop a brief and accurate patient-reported experience measure (PREM) capable of assessing involvement in physical health care planning for mental health service users and their carers.
We employed psychometric and statistical techniques to refine a bank of candidate questionnaire items, derived from qualitative interviews, into a valid and reliable measure involvement in physical health care planning. We assessed the psychometric performance of the item bank using modern psychometric analyses. We assessed unidimensionality, scalability, fit to the partial credit Rasch model, category threshold ordering, local dependency, differential item functioning, and test-retest reliability. Once purified of poorly performing and erroneous items, we simulated computerized adaptive testing (CAT) with 15, 10 and 5 items using the calibrated item bank.
Issues with category threshold ordering, local dependency and differential item functioning were evident for a number of items in the nascent item bank and were resolved by removing problematic items. The final 19 item PREM had excellent fit to the Rasch model fit (x2 = 192.94, df = 1515, P = .02, RMSEA = .03 (95% CI = .01-.04). The 19-item bank had excellent reliability (marginal r = 0.87). The correlation between questionnaire scores at baseline and 2-week follow-up was high (r = .70, P < .01) and 94.9% of assessment pairs were within the Bland Altman limits of agreement. Simulated CAT demonstrated that assessments could be made using as few as 10 items (mean SE = .43).
We developed a flexible patient reported outcome measure to quantify service user and carer involvement in physical health care planning. We demonstrate the potential to substantially reduce assessment length whilst maintaining reliability by utilizing CAT.
患有严重精神健康状况的人会因药物副作用和生活方式等因素导致的身体健康问题而增加发病率。根据护理计划提供协调的精神和身体健康护理可以帮助降低该人群的发病率和死亡率。由于缺乏经过验证的工具来准确评估精神卫生服务使用者和照顾者参与身体健康护理计划的程度,因此开发新的护理模式的努力受到阻碍。
开发一种简短而准确的患者报告体验测量工具 (PREM),能够评估精神卫生服务使用者及其照顾者参与身体健康护理计划的程度。
我们采用心理测量和统计技术,从定性访谈中得出的候选问卷项目库中提炼出一个有效的、可靠的衡量指标,用于评估参与精神卫生服务的患者及其照顾者的身体健康护理计划。我们使用现代心理测量分析方法评估项目库的心理测量性能。我们评估了单维性、可扩展性、与部分信用罗吉特模型的拟合度、类别阈值排序、局部依赖性、差异项目功能和重测信度。一旦清除了表现不佳和错误的项目,我们使用校准后的项目库,用 15、10 和 5 个项目模拟了计算机自适应测试 (CAT)。
在新生项目库中,有几个项目存在类别阈值排序、局部依赖性和差异项目功能方面的问题,通过删除有问题的项目解决了这些问题。最终的 19 项 PREM 与罗吉特模型拟合度非常好(x2 = 192.94,df = 1515,P =.02,RMSEA =.03(95%CI =.01-.04)。19 项项目库具有极好的可靠性(边缘 r = 0.87)。问卷得分在基线和 2 周随访之间的相关性很高(r =.70,P <.01),并且 94.9%的评估对都在 Bland Altman 一致性界限内。模拟 CAT 表明,评估可以使用少至 10 个项目(平均值 SE =.43)进行。
我们开发了一种灵活的患者报告结果测量工具,用于量化服务使用者和照顾者参与身体健康护理计划的程度。我们通过使用 CAT 展示了在保持可靠性的同时大幅缩短评估长度的潜力。