1. Quality of life of the Canadian population using the VR-12: population norms for health utility values, summary component scores and domain scores.
- Author
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Trenaman L, Guh D, Bansback N, Sawatzky R, Sun H, Cuthbertson L, and Whitehurst DGT
- Subjects
- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Canada, Health Status, Surveys and Questionnaires, Adolescent, Young Adult, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, 80 and over, North American People, Quality of Life psychology, Virtual Reality
- Abstract
Objectives: To estimate Canadian population norms (health utility values, summary component scores and domain scores) for the VR-12., Methods: English and French speaking Canadians aged 18 and older completed an online survey that included sociodemographic questions and standardized health status instruments, including the VR-12. Responses to the VR-12 were summarized as: (i) a health utility value; (ii) mental and physical component summary scores (MCS and PCS, respectively), and (iii) eight domain scores. Norms were calculated for the full sample and by gender, age group, and province/territory (univariate), and for several multivariate stratifications (e.g., age group and gender). Results were summarized using descriptive statistics, including number of respondents, mean and standard deviation (SD), median and percentiles (25th and 75th), and minimum and maximum., Results: A total of 6761 people who clicked on the survey link completed the survey (83.4% completion rate), of whom 6741 (99.7%) were included in the analysis. The mean health utility score was 0.698 (SD = 0.216). Mean health utility scores tended to be higher in older age groups, ranging from 0.661 (SD = 0.214) in those aged 18-29 to 0.728 (SD = 0.310) in those aged 80+. Average MCS scores were higher in older age groups, while PCS scores were lower. Females consistently reported lower mean health utility values, summary component scores and domain scores compared with males., Conclusions: This is the first study to present Canadian norms for the VR-12. Health utility norms can serve as a valuable input for Canadian economic models, while summary component and domain norms can help interpret routinely-collected data., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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