4.5 Article

Assessing measurement properties of two single-item general health measures

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 191-201

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-005-0887-2

Keywords

health related quality of life; psychometrics; rasch; self-rated health; single-item measure

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Background: Multi-item health status measures can be lengthy, expensive, and burdensome to collect. Single-item measures may be an alternative. We compared measurement properties of two single-item, general self-rated health (GSRH) questions to assess how well they captured information in a validated, multi-item instrument. Methods: We administered a general health survey (SF-12V) that included standard and comparative forms of a GSRH. We repeated the survey two weeks later to the same 75 medically stable outpatients to test for GSRH reproducibility, reliability, and validity using SF-12V Physical Functioning and Emotional Health subscales as a reference. Results: At each survey administration, the two GSRH questions demonstrated good alternate forms reliability (first administration: r=0.74, p < 0.001; second administration: r=0.74, p < 0.001) and good reproducibility (standard: ICC 0.69; comparative: ICC 0.85). Both GSRH items correlated with physical functioning (standard: r=0.66; comparative: r=0.56) and emotional health measures (standard: r=0.65; comparative: r=0.59). Mean subscale measures associated with responses in each GSRH category were significantly different (ANOVA, p < 0.001), indicating strong discriminant scale performance. Conclusions: Our single-item, GSRH questions demonstrated good reproducibility, reliability, and strong concurrent and discriminant scale performance with an established health status measure.

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