43 results on '"Kreimeier S"'
Search Results
2. PCR245 Stakeholder Engagement and Expert Consultation on the EuroQol Toddler and Infant Populations (EQ-TIPS) Measure of Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL)
- Author
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Verstraete, J., primary, Kreimeier, S., additional, Dalziel, K., additional, Morrow, B.M., additional, Jelsma, J., additional, Roudijk, B., additional, Devlin, N., additional, Bidgood, E., additional, and Herdman, M., additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Patient- and person-reports on healthcare: preferences, outcomes, experiences, and satisfaction – an essay
- Author
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Klose, K., Kreimeier, S., Tangermann, U., Aumann, I., Damm, K., and on behalf of the RHO Group
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ-HWB
- Author
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Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Brazier, J, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Greiner, W, Pickard, AS, Augustovski, F, Engel, Lidia, Gibbons, L, Yang, Z, Monteiro, AL, Kuharic, M, Belizan, M, Bjørner, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Brazier, J, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Greiner, W, Pickard, AS, Augustovski, F, Engel, Lidia, Gibbons, L, Yang, Z, Monteiro, AL, Kuharic, M, Belizan, M, and Bjørner, J
- Abstract
Objectives: The development of measures such as the EQ-HWB (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-HWB measure.
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- 2022
5. Generation, Selection, and Face Validation of Items for a New Generic Measure of Quality of Life: The EQ-HWB
- Author
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Carlton, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Connell, J, Brazier, J, Ludwig, K, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Belizán, M, Yang, Z, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Greiner, W, Pickard, S, Augustovski, F, Carlton, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Connell, J, Brazier, J, Ludwig, K, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Belizán, M, Yang, Z, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Greiner, W, Pickard, S, and Augustovski, F
- Abstract
Objectives: This article aims to describe the generation and selection of items (stage 2) and face validation (stage 3) of a large international (multilingual) project to develop a new generic measure, the EQ-HWB (EQ Health and Wellbeing), for use in economic evaluation across health, social care, and public health to estimate quality-adjusted life-years. Methods: Items from commonly used generic, carer, social care, and mental health quality of life measures were mapped onto domains or subdomains identified from a literature review. Potential terms and items were reviewed and refined to ensure coverage of the construct of the domains/subdomain (stage 2). Input on the potential item pool, response options, and recall period was sought from 3 key stakeholder groups. The pool of candidate items was tested in qualitative interviews with potential future users in an international face validation study (stage 3). Results: Stage 2 resulted in the generation of 687 items. Predetermined selection criteria were applied by the research team resulting in 598 items being dropped, leaving 89 items that were reviewed by key stakeholder groups. Face validation (stage 3) tested 97 draft items and 4 response scales. A total of 47 items were retained and 14 were modified, whereas 3 were added to the candidate pool of items. This resulted in a 64-item set. Conclusions: This international multiculture, multilingual study with a common methodology identified many items that performed well across all countries. These were taken to the psychometric testing along with modified and new items for the EQ-HWB.
- Published
- 2022
6. The EQ-HWB: Overview of the Development of a Measure of Health and Wellbeing and Key Results
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Brazier, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Pickard, AS, Augustovski, F, Greiner, W, Engel, L, Belizan, M, Yang, Z, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Gibbons, L, Ludwig, K, Carlton, J, Connell, J, Rand, S, Devlin, N, Jones, K, Tsuchiya, A, Lovett, R, Naidoo, B, Rowen, D, Carlos Rejon-Parrilla, J, Brazier, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Luo, N, Mulhern, B, Pickard, AS, Augustovski, F, Greiner, W, Engel, L, Belizan, M, Yang, Z, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Gibbons, L, Ludwig, K, Carlton, J, Connell, J, Rand, S, Devlin, N, Jones, K, Tsuchiya, A, Lovett, R, Naidoo, B, Rowen, D, and Carlos Rejon-Parrilla, J
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Existing measures for estimating quality-adjusted life-years are mostly limited to health-related quality of life. This article presents an overview of the development the EQ-HWB (EQ Health and Wellbeing), which is a measure that encompasses health and wellbeing. METHODS: Stages: (1) Establishing domains through reviews of the qualitative literature informed by a conceptual framework. (2) Generation and selection of items to cover the domains. (3) Face validation of these items through qualitative interviews with 168 patients, social care users, general population, and carers across 6 countries (Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, United Kingdom, United States). (4) Extensive psychometric testing of candidate items (using classical, factor analysis, and item response theory methods) on > 4000 respondents in the 6 countries. Stakeholders were consulted throughout. RESULTS: A total of 32 subdomains grouped into 7 high-level domains were identified from the qualitative literature and 97 items generated to cover them. Face validation eliminated 36 items, modified 14, and added 3. Psychometric testing of 64 items found little difference in missing data or problems with response distribution, the conceptual model was confirmed except in China, and most items performed well in the item response theory in all countries. Evidence was presented to stakeholders in 2 rounds of consultation to inform the final selection of items for the EQ-HWB (25-item) and the short version of EQ-HWB (9-items). CONCLUSIONS: EQ-HWB measures have been developed internationally for evaluating interventions in health, public health, and social care including the impact on patients, social care users, and carers.
- Published
- 2022
7. Valuing EQ-5D-Y: the current state of play
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Devlin, N, Pan, T, Kreimeier, S, Verstraete, J, Stolk, E, Rand, K, Herdman, M, Devlin, N, Pan, T, Kreimeier, S, Verstraete, J, Stolk, E, Rand, K, and Herdman, M
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: For nearly a decade, value sets for the EQ-5D-Y were not available, reflecting challenges in valuing child HRQoL. A methodological research programme led to publication of a valuation protocol in 2020, which was rapidly taken up by local study teams. By the end of 2022, between 11 and 17 EQ-5D-Y value sets will be available, more than for any other child HRQoL measure. It is timely to review the experience of those using the protocol to identify early learnings and remaining issues where more research is needed. METHODS: In June 2021, the EuroQol Group organised a three-day workshop, bringing together all those involved in EQ-5D-Y value set studies and related methodological research concerning EQ-5D-Y and valuation. Workshop discussions were captured by note taking and recording all sessions and online chat. A narrative summary of all sessions was produced and synthesised to identify points of agreement and aspects of methods where uncertainty remains. RESULTS: There was broad agreement that DCE is working well as the principal valuation method. However, the most appropriate means of anchoring the latent scale values produced by DCE remains unclear. Some studies have deviated from the protocol by extending the number of states included in TTO tasks, to better support modelling of DCE and TTO. There is ongoing discussion about the relative merits of alternative variants of TTO and other methods for anchoring. Very few studies have consulted with local end-users to gauge the acceptability of methods used to value EQ-5D-Y. CONCLUSIONS: Priority areas for research include testing alternative methods for anchoring DCE data; exploring the preferences of adolescents; and scale differences in values for EQ-5D-Y and adult EQ-5D states, and implications of such differences for the use of EQ-5D-Y values in HTA. Given the normative elements of the protocol, engaging with HTA bodies and other local users should be the first step for all future value set studies. Val
- Published
- 2022
8. Analytical Considerations When Anchoring Discrete Choice Experiment Values Using Composite Time Trade-Off Data: The Case of EQ-5D-Y-3L.
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Mott, DJ, Devlin, NJ, Kreimeier, S, Norman, R, Shah, KK, Rivero-Arias, O, Mott, DJ, Devlin, NJ, Kreimeier, S, Norman, R, Shah, KK, and Rivero-Arias, O
- Abstract
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are becoming increasingly used to elicit preferences for children's health states. However, DCE data need to be anchored to produce value sets, and composite time trade-off (cTTO) data are typically used in the context of EQ-5D-Y-3L valuation. The objective of this paper is to compare different anchoring methods, summarise the characteristics of the value sets they produce, and outline key considerations for analysts. Three anchoring methods were compared using data from published studies: (1) rescaling using the mean value for the worst health state; (2) linear mapping; and (3) hybrid modelling. The worst state rescaling value set had the largest range. The worst state rescaling and linear mapping value sets preserved the relative importance of the dimensions from the DCE, whereas the hybrid model value set did not. Overall, the predicted values from the hybrid model value set were more closely aligned with the cTTO values. These findings are relatively generalisable. Deciding upon which anchoring approach to use is challenging, as there are numerous considerations. Where cTTO data are collected for more than one health state, anchoring on the worst health state will arguably be suboptimal. However, the final choice of approach may require value judgements to be made. Researchers should seek input from relevant stakeholders when commencing valuation studies to help guide decisions and should clearly set out their rationale for their preferred anchoring approach in study outputs.
- Published
- 2022
9. Generation, selection, and face validation of items for a new generic measure of quality of life: The EQ health and wellbeing
- Author
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Carlton, J., Peasgood, T., Mukuria, C., Connell, J., Brazier, J., Ludwig, K., Marten, O., Kreimeier, S., Engel, L., Belizán, M., Yang, Z., Monteiro, A., Kuharic, M., Luo, N., Mulhern, B., Greiner, W., Pickard, S., and Augustovski, F.
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: This article aims to describe the generation and selection of items (stage 2) and face validation (stage 3) of a large international (multilingual) project to develop a new generic measure, the EQ Health and Wellbeing, for use in economic evaluation across health, social care, and public health to estimate quality-adjusted life-years.; METHODS: Items from commonly used generic, carer, social care, and mental health quality of life measures were mapped onto domains or subdomains identified from a literature review. Potential terms and items were reviewed and refined to ensure coverage of the construct of the domains/subdomain (stage 2). Input on the potential item pool, response options, and recall period was sought from 3 key stakeholder groups. The pool of candidate items was tested in qualitative interviews with potential future users in an international face validation study (stage 3).; RESULTS: Stage 2 resulted in the generation of 687 items. Predetermined selection criteria were applied by the research team resulting in 598 items being dropped, leaving 89 items that were reviewed by key stakeholder groups. Face validation (stage 3) tested 97 draft items and 4 response scales. A total of 47 items were retained and 14 were modified, whereas 3 were added to the candidate pool of items. This resulted in a 64-item set.; CONCLUSIONS: This international multiculture, multilingual study with a common methodology identified many items that performed well across all countries. These were taken to the psychometric testing along with modified and new items for the EQ Health and Wellbeing. Copyright © 2022 International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2022
10. Think of the Children: A Discussion of the Rationale for and Implications of the Perspective Used for EQ-5D-Y Health State Valuation
- Author
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Lipman, S.A. (Stefan), Reckers-Droog, V.T. (Vivian), Kreimeier, S (Simone), Lipman, S.A. (Stefan), Reckers-Droog, V.T. (Vivian), and Kreimeier, S (Simone)
- Abstract
_Objectives:_ The recently published EQ-5D-Y valuation protocol prescribes the general public values EQ-5D-Y health states for a 10-year-old child. This child perspective differs
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Think of the Children: A Discussion of the Rationale for and Implications of the Perspective Used for EQ-5D-Y Health State Valuation
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Lipman, Stefan, Reckers - Droog, Vivian, Kreimeier, S, Lipman, Stefan, Reckers - Droog, Vivian, and Kreimeier, S
- Abstract
Objectives: The recently published EQ-5D-Y valuation protocol prescribes the general public values EQ-5D-Y health states for a 10-year-old child. This child perspective differs from the individual perspective applied for valuation of adult EQ-5D instruments. This article discusses the rationale for and implications of applying a child perspective for EQ-5D-Y health state valuation. Methods: This article was informed by an exploration of the normative and empirical literature on health state valuation. We identified and summarized key discussion points in a narrative review. Results: Although valuing EQ-5D-Y health states from an individual perspective is feasible, it may be problematic for several reasons. The use of a child perspective implies that—rather than valuing one's own health—someone else's health is valued. This may require the projection of one's own beliefs, expectations, and preferences on others, which could change the decision processes underlying the elicited preferences. Furthermore, because preferences are obtained for a 10-year-old child, it is unclear if this given age as well as other (missing) information on the described child beneficiary (should) affect valuation of EQ-5D-Y health states. Conclusions: The change from an individual to a child perspective in the valuation of EQ-5D-Y will likely lead to differences in utilities. This has implications for the estimation of incremental health-related quality-of-life gains in economic evaluations of health technologies for children and adolescents and therefore might affect reimbursement decisions. Further research is necessary for gaining insight into the extent to which this impact is normatively and empirically justified.
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- 2021
12. An exploration of methods for obtaining 0 = dead anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values
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Shah, K.K., Ramos-Goñi, J.M., Kreimeier, S., and Devlin, N.J.
- Abstract
Objectives\ud \ud Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) can be used to obtain latent scale values for the EQ-5D-Y, but these require anchoring at 0 = dead to meet the conventions of quality-adjusted life year (QALY) estimation. The primary aim of this study is to compare four preference elicitation methods for obtaining anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values.\ud \ud \ud \ud Methods\ud \ud Four methods were tested: visual analogue scale (VAS), DCE (with a duration attribute), lag-time time trade-off (TTO) and the location-of-dead (LOD) approach. In computer-assisted personal interviews, UK general public respondents valued EQ-5D-3L health states from an adult perspective and EQ-5D-Y health states from a 10-year-old child perspective. Respondents completed valuation tasks using all four methods, under both perspectives.\ud \ud \ud \ud Results\ud \ud 349 interviews were conducted. Overall, respondents gave lower values under the adult perspective compared to the child perspective, with some variation across methods. The mean TTO value for the worst health state (33333) was about equal to dead in the child perspective and worse than dead in the adult perspective. The mean VAS rescaled value for 33333 was also higher in the child perspective. The DCE produced positive child perspective values and negative adult perspective values, though the models were not consistent. The LOD median rescaled value for 33333 was negative under both perspectives and higher in the child perspective.\ud \ud \ud \ud Discussion\ud \ud There was broad agreement across methods. Potential criteria for selecting a preferred anchoring method are presented. We conclude by discussing the decision-making circumstances under which utilities and QALY estimates for children and adults need to be commensurate to achieve allocative efficiency.
- Published
- 2020
13. E-QALY: psychometric testing and selecting the items for a new generic preference-based measure
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Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Yang, Z, Gibbons, L, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Mulhern, B, Pickard, S, Luo, N, Augustovski, F, Belizan, M, Greiner, W, Brazier, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Yang, Z, Gibbons, L, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Mulhern, B, Pickard, S, Luo, N, Augustovski, F, Belizan, M, Greiner, W, and Brazier, J
- Published
- 2020
14. E-QALY: face validity testing the items for a new generic preference-based measure
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Carlton, J, Connell, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Ludwig, K, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Yang, Z, Belizan, M, Rodriguez, R, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Mulhern, B, Pickard, AS, Luo, N, Augustovski, F, Greiner, W, Carlton, J, Connell, J, Peasgood, T, Mukuria, C, Ludwig, K, Marten, O, Kreimeier, S, Engel, Lidia, Yang, Z, Belizan, M, Rodriguez, R, Monteiro, A, Kuharic, M, Mulhern, B, Pickard, AS, Luo, N, Augustovski, F, and Greiner, W
- Published
- 2020
15. International Valuation Protocol for the EQ-5D-Y-3L
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Ramos-Goni, JM, Oppe, M, Stolk, E, Shah, K, Kreimeier, S, Rivero-Arias, O, Devlin, N, Ramos-Goni, JM, Oppe, M, Stolk, E, Shah, K, Kreimeier, S, Rivero-Arias, O, and Devlin, N
- Abstract
The EQ-5D-Y-3L is a generic, health-related, quality-of-life instrument for use in younger populations. Some methodological studies have explored the valuation of children's EQ-5D-Y-3L health states. There are currently no published value sets available for the EQ-5D-Y-3L that are appropriate for use in a cost-utility analysis. The aim of this article was to describe the development of the valuation protocol for the EQ-5D-Y-3L instrument. There were several research questions that needed to be answered to develop a valuation protocol for EQ-5D-Y-3L health states. Most important of these were: (1) Do we need to obtain separate values for the EQ-5D-Y-3L, or can we use the ones from the EQ-5D-3L? (2) Whose values should we elicit: children or adults? (3) Which valuation methods should be used to obtain values for child's health states that are anchored in Full health = 1 and Dead = 0? The EuroQol Research Foundation has pursued a research programme to provide insight into these questions. In this article, we summarized the results of the research programme concluding with the description of the features of the EQ-5D-Y-3L valuation protocol. The tasks included in the protocol for valuing EQ-5D-Y-3L health states are discrete choice experiments for obtaining the relative importance of dimensions/levels and composite time-trade-off for anchoring the discrete choice experiment values on 1 = Full Health and 0 = Dead. This protocol is now available for use by research teams to generate EQ-5D-Y-3L value sets for their countries allowing the implementation of a cost-utility analysis for younger populations.
- Published
- 2020
16. An exploration of methods for obtaining 0=dead anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values
- Author
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Shah, KK, Manuel Ramos-Goni, J, Kreimeier, S, Devlin, NJ, Shah, KK, Manuel Ramos-Goni, J, Kreimeier, S, and Devlin, NJ
- Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) can be used to obtain latent scale values for the EQ-5D-Y, but these require anchoring at 0 = dead to meet the conventions of quality-adjusted life year (QALY) estimation. The primary aim of this study is to compare four preference elicitation methods for obtaining anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values. METHODS: Four methods were tested: visual analogue scale (VAS), DCE (with a duration attribute), lag-time time trade-off (TTO) and the location-of-dead (LOD) approach. In computer-assisted personal interviews, UK general public respondents valued EQ-5D-3L health states from an adult perspective and EQ-5D-Y health states from a 10-year-old child perspective. Respondents completed valuation tasks using all four methods, under both perspectives. RESULTS: 349 interviews were conducted. Overall, respondents gave lower values under the adult perspective compared to the child perspective, with some variation across methods. The mean TTO value for the worst health state (33333) was about equal to dead in the child perspective and worse than dead in the adult perspective. The mean VAS rescaled value for 33333 was also higher in the child perspective. The DCE produced positive child perspective values and negative adult perspective values, though the models were not consistent. The LOD median rescaled value for 33333 was negative under both perspectives and higher in the child perspective. DISCUSSION: There was broad agreement across methods. Potential criteria for selecting a preferred anchoring method are presented. We conclude by discussing the decision-making circumstances under which utilities and QALY estimates for children and adults need to be commensurate to achieve allocative efficiency.
- Published
- 2020
17. Impact of Platelets and Fresh Frozen Plasma in Contrast to Red Cell Concentrate on Unstimulated and Stimulated Cytokine Release in an In Vitro Model of Transfusion
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Schneider, S. O., Rensing, H., Gräber, S., Kreuer, S., Kleinschmidt, S., Kreimeier, S., Müller, P., Mathes, A. M., and Biedler, A. E.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Measuring Integrated Care from the Patient’s Perspective: Validation of the German Patient Perspectives of Integrated Care (PPIC-D) Instrument
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Feng, YS, Kreimeier, S, Lindena, G, Buchholz, I, Greiner, W, and Kohlmann, T
- Subjects
ddc: 610 ,610 Medical sciences ,Medicine - Abstract
Background: As integrated care (IV) becomes important for modern medicine, measuring how IV impacts patient experiences is crucial. The US-developed “Patient Perceptions of Integrated Care” (PPIC) questionnaire was translated and adapted to the German language and health care context (PPIC-Deutsch,[for full text, please go to the a.m. URL], 18. Deutscher Kongress für Versorgungsforschung (DKVF)
- Published
- 2019
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19. Messung integrierter Versorgung aus Patientenperspektive: Übersetzung und Adaptation des PPICs zur Erfassung von Patientenerfahrungen im deutschen Versorgungskontext
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Feng, YS, Kreimeier, S, Buchholz, I, Lindena, G, Greiner, W, Kohlmann, T, Feng, YS, Kreimeier, S, Buchholz, I, Lindena, G, Greiner, W, and Kohlmann, T
- Published
- 2018
20. Valuation of EuroQol Five-Dimensional Questionnaire, Youth Version (EQ-5D-Y) and EuroQol Five-Dimensional Questionnaire, Three-Level Version (EQ-5D-3L) Health States: The Impact of Wording and Perspective
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Kreimeier, S, Oppe, M, Ramos-Goñi, JM, Cole, A, Devlin, N, Herdman, M, Mulhern, B, Shah, KK, Stolk, E, Rivero-Arias, O, Greiner, W, Kreimeier, S, Oppe, M, Ramos-Goñi, JM, Cole, A, Devlin, N, Herdman, M, Mulhern, B, Shah, KK, Stolk, E, Rivero-Arias, O, and Greiner, W
- Abstract
© 2018 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research Background: Valuations of health states were affected by the wording of the two instruments (EQ-5D-3L and EQ-5D-Y) and by the perspective taken (child or adult). Objectives: There is a growing demand for value sets for the EQ-5D-Y (EQ-5D instrument for younger populations). Given the similarities between EQ-5D-Y and EQ-5D-3L, we investigated whether valuations of health states were affected by the differences in wording between the two instruments and by the perspective taken in the valuation exercise (child or adult). Study Design: Respondents were randomly assigned to EQ-5D-3L or EQ-5D-Y (instrument) and further into two groups that either valued health states for an adult or for a 10-year-old child (perspective). The valuation tasks were composite time trade-off (C-TTO) and discrete choice experiments (DCE), including comparisons with death (DCE + death). Members of the adult general population in four countries (Germany, Netherlands, Spain, England) participated in computer-assisted personal interviews. Methods: Two-way multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) and post hoc tests were used to compare C-TTO responses and chi-square tests were conducted to compare DCE + death valuations. Results: A significant interaction effect between instrument and perspective for C-TTO responses was found. Significant differences by perspective (adult and child) occurred only for the EQ-5D-3L. Significant differences in values between instruments (EQ-5D-3L and EQ-5D-Y) occurred only for the adult perspective. Both significant results were confirmed by the DCE + death results. When comparing EQ-5D-3L for adult perspective and EQ-5D-Y for child perspective, values were also significantly different. Conclusions: The results identified an interaction effect between wording of the instrument and perspective on elicited values, suggesting that current EQ-5D-3L value sets should not be employed to assig
- Published
- 2018
21. Extension Of The Labels Within The Eq-5d-Y
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Kreimeier, S, primary, Åström, M, additional, Burström, K, additional, Egmar, A, additional, Gusi, N, additional, Herdman, M, additional, Kind, P, additional, Oppe, M, additional, Pérez Sousa, M, additional, and Greiner, W, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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22. PHP231 - Extension Of The Labels Within The Eq-5d-Y
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Kreimeier, S, Åström, M, Burström, K, Egmar, A, Gusi, N, Herdman, M, Kind, P, Oppe, M, Pérez Sousa, M, and Greiner, W
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Cigarette smoking prevalence in Dhaka (Bangladesh)
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Reiss, K, primary, Kreimeier, S, additional, Röhren, A, additional, Bültemeier, D, additional, Knittel, M, additional, Zanuzdana, A, additional, Khan, M, additional, and Krämer, A, additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Impact of Platelets and Fresh Frozen Plasma in Contrast to Red Cell Concentrate on Unstimulated and Stimulated Cytokine Release in anIn VitroModel of Transfusion
- Author
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Schneider, S. O., primary, Rensing, H., additional, Gräber, S., additional, Kreuer, S., additional, Kleinschmidt, S., additional, Kreimeier, S., additional, Müller, P., additional, Mathes, A. M., additional, and Biedler, A. E., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. A Case Management Approach in Stroke Care: A Mixed-Methods Acceptance Analysis From the Perspective of the Medical Profession.
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Duevel JA, Baumgartner A, Grosser J, Kreimeier S, Elkenkamp S, and Greiner W
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- Humans, Germany, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Attitude of Health Personnel, Surveys and Questionnaires, Case Managers psychology, Case Management standards, Case Management organization & administration, Stroke therapy, Stroke psychology
- Abstract
Purpose of Study: In terms of continuous and coordinated health care, cross-sectoral care structures are crucial. However, the German health care system is characterized by fragmentation of medical services and responsibilities. This fragmentation leads to multiple interfaces frequently causing loss of information, effectiveness, and quality. The concept of case management has the potential to improve cooperation between sectors and health care providers. Hence, a case management intervention for patients with stroke was evaluated with an acceptance analysis on the physicians' willingness to cooperate with stroke managers and their assessment of the potential of case management for the health care of patients with stroke., Primary Practice Settings: Primary practice settings included physicians working in the hospital, rehabilitation, and outpatient sectors who had actual or potential contact with a stroke case manager within the project region of East Westphalia-Lippe., Methodology and Sample: The analysis was conducted using a mixed-methods approach. Expert interviews were conducted in 2020. Afterward a questionnaire was developed, which was then distributed to physicians in 2021. Both the interviews and the questionnaire included questions on conceptual knowledge and concrete expectations prior of the project, on experiences during the project and on recommendations and physicians' assessment of future organization in health care to classify and describe the acceptance., Results: Nine interviews were conducted and 23 questionnaires were completed. Only slightly more than 50% of the physicians had prior knowledge of the case management approach. Overall, ambiguous results concerning the acceptance of case managers were revealed. Additional personal assistance for patients with stroke was seen as beneficial at the same time critical perspectives regarding further fragmentation of health care and overlapping of competences with existing professional groups or forms of health care were collected. General practitioners in particular were critical of the case management approach., Implications for Case Management Practice: From the physicians' point of view, at least two changes are necessary for the project approach to be integrated into standard care. First, the target group should be adapted according to the case management approach. Second, the delegation of tasks and responsibilities to case managers should be revised. The sectoral difference in the acceptance of case managers by physicians indicates that active cooperation and communication in everyday work has direct impact on the acceptance of a new occupational profession. Physician acceptance has a significant impact on the implementation of new treatment modalities and thus influences the overall quality of health care., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. An integrated molecular risk score early in life for subsequent childhood asthma risk.
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Böck A, Urner K, Eckert JK, Salvermoser M, Laubhahn K, Kunze S, Kumbrink J, Hoeppner MP, Kalkbrenner K, Kreimeier S, Beyer K, Hamelmann E, Kabesch M, Depner M, Hansen G, Riedler J, Roponen M, Schmausser-Hechfellner E, Barnig C, Divaret-Chauveau A, Karvonen AM, Pekkanen J, Frei R, Roduit C, Lauener R, and Schaub B
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- Humans, Female, Male, Child, Child, Preschool, Risk Factors, Longitudinal Studies, DNA Methylation, Biomarkers, Birth Cohort, Asthma epidemiology, Asthma genetics, Asthma diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Numerous children present with early wheeze symptoms, yet solely a subgroup develops childhood asthma. Early identification of children at risk is key for clinical monitoring, timely patient-tailored treatment, and preventing chronic, severe sequelae. For early prediction of childhood asthma, we aimed to define an integrated risk score combining established risk factors with genome-wide molecular markers at birth, complemented by subsequent clinical symptoms/diagnoses (wheezing, atopic dermatitis, food allergy)., Methods: Three longitudinal birth cohorts (PAULINA/PAULCHEN, n = 190 + 93 = 283, PASTURE, n = 1133) were used to predict childhood asthma (age 5-11) including epidemiological characteristics and molecular markers: genotype, DNA methylation and mRNA expression (RNASeq/NanoString). Apparent (ap) and optimism-corrected (oc) performance (AUC/R2) was assessed leveraging evidence from independent studies (Naïve-Bayes approach) combined with high-dimensional logistic regression models (LASSO)., Results: Asthma prediction with epidemiological characteristics at birth (maternal asthma, sex, farm environment) yielded an ocAUC = 0.65. Inclusion of molecular markers as predictors resulted in an improvement in apparent prediction performance, however, for optimism-corrected performance only a moderate increase was observed (upto ocAUC = 0.68). The greatest discriminate power was reached by adding the first symptoms/diagnosis (up to ocAUC = 0.76; increase of 0.08, p = .002). Longitudinal analysis of selected mRNA expression in PASTURE (cord blood, 1, 4.5, 6 years) showed that expression at age six had the strongest association with asthma and correlation of genes getting larger over time (r = .59, p < .001, 4.5-6 years)., Conclusion: Applying epidemiological predictors alone showed moderate predictive abilities. Molecular markers from birth modestly improved prediction. Allergic symptoms/diagnoses enhanced the power of prediction, which is important for clinical practice and for the design of future studies with molecular markers., (© 2024 The Authors. Clinical & Experimental Allergy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
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- 2024
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27. Analytical Considerations When Anchoring Discrete Choice Experiment Values Using Composite Time Trade-Off Data: The Case of EQ-5D-Y-3L.
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Mott DJ, Devlin NJ, Kreimeier S, Norman R, Shah KK, and Rivero-Arias O
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- Child, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Child Health, Health Status, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) are becoming increasingly used to elicit preferences for children's health states. However, DCE data need to be anchored to produce value sets, and composite time trade-off (cTTO) data are typically used in the context of EQ-5D-Y-3L valuation. The objective of this paper is to compare different anchoring methods, summarise the characteristics of the value sets they produce, and outline key considerations for analysts. Three anchoring methods were compared using data from published studies: (1) rescaling using the mean value for the worst health state; (2) linear mapping; and (3) hybrid modelling. The worst state rescaling value set had the largest range. The worst state rescaling and linear mapping value sets preserved the relative importance of the dimensions from the DCE, whereas the hybrid model value set did not. Overall, the predicted values from the hybrid model value set were more closely aligned with the cTTO values. These findings are relatively generalisable. Deciding upon which anchoring approach to use is challenging, as there are numerous considerations. Where cTTO data are collected for more than one health state, anchoring on the worst health state will arguably be suboptimal. However, the final choice of approach may require value judgements to be made. Researchers should seek input from relevant stakeholders when commencing valuation studies to help guide decisions and should clearly set out their rationale for their preferred anchoring approach in study outputs., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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28. Correction to: EQ-5D-Y Value Set for Germany.
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Kreimeier S, Mott D, Ludwig K, and Greiner W
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- 2022
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29. EQ-5D-Y Value Set for Germany.
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Kreimeier S, Mott D, Ludwig K, and Greiner W
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- Adult, Adolescent, Child, Humans, Germany, Surveys and Questionnaires, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Health Status, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Demand is increasing for youth-specific preference-based health-related quality-of-life measures for inclusion in evaluations of healthcare interventions for children and adolescents. The EQ-5D-Youth (EQ-5D-Y) has the potential to become such a preference-based measure., Objective: This study applied the recently published EQ-5D-Y valuation protocol to develop a German EQ-5D-Y value set and explored the differences between values given to youth health by parents and non-parents., Methods: To elicit EQ-5D-Y health state preferences, a representative sample of 1030 adults of the general population completed a discrete choice experiment (DCE) online survey, and 215 adults participated in face-to-face interviews applying composite time trade-off (cTTO). Respondents were asked to consider a 10-year-old child living in the health states. DCE data were modelled using a mixed logit model. To derive the value set, DCE latent scale values were anchored onto adjusted mean cTTO values using a linear mapping approach., Results: Adult respondents considered pain/discomfort and feeling worried/sad/unhappy as the two most important dimensions in terms of youth health. Adjusted mean cTTO values ranged from - 0.350 for health state 33333 to 0.970 for health state 21111. The EQ-5D-Y value set showed a logical order for all parameter estimates, and predicted values ranged from - 0.283 to 1. Differences in preferences by parental status were mainly observed for cTTO results, where mean values were larger for parents than for non-parents., Conclusions: Applying the valuation protocol, a German EQ-5D-Y value set with internally consistent coefficients was developed. This enables the instrument to be used in economic evaluations of paediatric healthcare interventions., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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30. Developing a New Generic Health and Wellbeing Measure: Psychometric Survey Results for the EQ-HWB.
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Peasgood T, Mukuria C, Brazier J, Marten O, Kreimeier S, Luo N, Mulhern B, Greiner W, Pickard AS, Augustovski F, Engel L, Gibbons L, Yang Z, Monteiro AL, Kuharic M, Belizan M, and Bjørner J
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- Factor Analysis, Statistical, Humans, Psychometrics methods, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, United States, Caregivers
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Objectives: The development of measures such as the EQ-HWB (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-HWB measure., (Copyright © 2021 International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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31. Generation, Selection, and Face Validation of Items for a New Generic Measure of Quality of Life: The EQ-HWB.
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Carlton J, Peasgood T, Mukuria C, Connell J, Brazier J, Ludwig K, Marten O, Kreimeier S, Engel L, Belizán M, Yang Z, Monteiro A, Kuharic M, Luo N, Mulhern B, Greiner W, Pickard S, and Augustovski F
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- Humans, Psychometrics methods, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Caregivers, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objectives: This article aims to describe the generation and selection of items (stage 2) and face validation (stage 3) of a large international (multilingual) project to develop a new generic measure, the EQ-HWB (EQ Health and Wellbeing), for use in economic evaluation across health, social care, and public health to estimate quality-adjusted life-years., Methods: Items from commonly used generic, carer, social care, and mental health quality of life measures were mapped onto domains or subdomains identified from a literature review. Potential terms and items were reviewed and refined to ensure coverage of the construct of the domains/subdomain (stage 2). Input on the potential item pool, response options, and recall period was sought from 3 key stakeholder groups. The pool of candidate items was tested in qualitative interviews with potential future users in an international face validation study (stage 3)., Results: Stage 2 resulted in the generation of 687 items. Predetermined selection criteria were applied by the research team resulting in 598 items being dropped, leaving 89 items that were reviewed by key stakeholder groups. Face validation (stage 3) tested 97 draft items and 4 response scales. A total of 47 items were retained and 14 were modified, whereas 3 were added to the candidate pool of items. This resulted in a 64-item set., Conclusions: This international multiculture, multilingual study with a common methodology identified many items that performed well across all countries. These were taken to the psychometric testing along with modified and new items for the EQ-HWB., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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32. The EQ-HWB: Overview of the Development of a Measure of Health and Wellbeing and Key Results.
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Brazier J, Peasgood T, Mukuria C, Marten O, Kreimeier S, Luo N, Mulhern B, Pickard AS, Augustovski F, Greiner W, Engel L, Belizan M, Yang Z, Monteiro A, Kuharic M, Gibbons L, Ludwig K, Carlton J, Connell J, Rand S, Devlin N, Jones K, Tsuchiya A, Lovett R, Naidoo B, Rowen D, and Rejon-Parrilla JC
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- Humans, Psychometrics, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, United Kingdom, Caregivers, Quality of Life
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Objectives: Existing measures for estimating quality-adjusted life-years are mostly limited to health-related quality of life. This article presents an overview of the development the EQ-HWB (EQ Health and Wellbeing), which is a measure that encompasses health and wellbeing., Methods: Stages: (1) Establishing domains through reviews of the qualitative literature informed by a conceptual framework. (2) Generation and selection of items to cover the domains. (3) Face validation of these items through qualitative interviews with 168 patients, social care users, general population, and carers across 6 countries (Argentina, Australia, China, Germany, United Kingdom, United States). (4) Extensive psychometric testing of candidate items (using classical, factor analysis, and item response theory methods) on > 4000 respondents in the 6 countries. Stakeholders were consulted throughout., Results: A total of 32 subdomains grouped into 7 high-level domains were identified from the qualitative literature and 97 items generated to cover them. Face validation eliminated 36 items, modified 14, and added 3. Psychometric testing of 64 items found little difference in missing data or problems with response distribution, the conceptual model was confirmed except in China, and most items performed well in the item response theory in all countries. Evidence was presented to stakeholders in 2 rounds of consultation to inform the final selection of items for the EQ-HWB (25-item) and the short version of EQ-HWB (9-items)., Conclusions: EQ-HWB measures have been developed internationally for evaluating interventions in health, public health, and social care including the impact on patients, social care users, and carers., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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33. CHildhood Allergy and tolerance: Biomarkers and Predictors (CHAMP) and quality of life.
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Eckert JK, Kahle J, Böck A, Zeber K, Urner K, Greiner W, Kreimeier S, Beyer K, Dobbertin-Welsch J, Hamelmann E, Gellhaus I, Schorlemer C, Kabesch M, Kheiroddin P, von Mutius E, Depner M, Walter D, Hansen G, DeStefano S, Schnadt S, and Schaub B
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- Biomarkers, Child, Humans, Immune Tolerance, Hypersensitivity diagnosis, Quality of Life
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- 2022
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34. Comparison of Adult and Adolescent Preferences Toward EQ-5D-Y-3L Health States.
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Prevolnik Rupel V, Ramos-Goñi JM, Ogorevc M, Kreimeier S, Ludwig K, and Greiner W
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- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Slovenia, Spain, Young Adult, Health Status, Health Surveys, Patient Preference, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objectives: The international EQ-5D-Y-3L valuation protocol suggests obtaining preferences for EQ-5D-Y-3L health states from a sample of the general adult population. There is discussion around involving children and adolescents in the processes of preference elicitation and decision making. The objective of this study was to compare the preferences for EQ-5D-Y-3L obtained from adolescents for themselves to those of adults considering a hypothetical 10-year-old child in Germany, Slovenia, and Spain., Methods: A sample of a minimum of 700 adolescents and 1000 adults in each country was recruited through online panels. An online discrete choice experiment was used to obtain health-state preferences. For the purposes of comparison, all coefficients were rescaled to a 1 (best) to 0 (worst) scale. The differences between preferences in both samples were analyzed via the relative attribute importance of health dimensions from the mixed logit models., Results: Statistically significant differences between the preferences for EQ-5D-Y-3L states given by the 2 samples were observed in all 3 countries. The overall relative attribute importance was similar between adolescents and adults; adolescents usually gave more importance to mobility and self-care, and less to anxiety/depression. The rank-order of the dimension levels between adults and adolescents differs in all 3 countries., Conclusions: Preferences toward EQ-5D-Y-3L states differ if estimated by adults taking the perspective of a child or by the adolescents themselves. Although it seems possible to obtain adolescents' preferences for inclusion in EQ-5D-Y-3L value sets, the desirability and acceptance of their preferences by researchers and decision makers need to be explored further., (Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2021
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35. To What Extent Do Patient Preferences Differ From General Population Preferences?
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Ludwig K, Ramos-Goñi JM, Oppe M, Kreimeier S, and Greiner W
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Report, Young Adult, Health Status, Patient Preference, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objectives: In some countries including Germany, value sets based on general population preferences are not acceptable for decision-makers in healthcare because the impact of the reference group-general population versus patients-on utility decrements is questioned. The objective of this study was to explore potential differences in patient versus general population health preferences and a way of combining both preferences in economic evaluation., Methods: EQ-5D-5L general population preferences were available from national value sets in Germany and Spain. Patient preferences were obtained by conducting discrete choice experiments with patients with rheumatism and patients with diabetes mellitus in Germany and Spain using an online panel. The econometric approach was based on the conditional logit framework. Latent values were anchored using the national value sets., Results: A total of 1700 patients (Germany, n = 937; Spain, n = 763) were included in the analysis. In both countries, patients gave more importance to mobility, self-care, or usual activities and less importance to pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression than the general population. The size of these differences was larger in Germany than in Spain. In Germany, preferences reported by both patient groups were more similar than in Spain., Conclusion: Patient preferences differ from preferences derived from the general population. In contrast to the general population, patients gave more importance to the functional dimensions than to symptoms in both countries. The extent of the differences depends on the disease and the country. For countries preferring patient preferences, a possible way of incorporating the patient perspective in health state valuation was suggested and needs to be further explored., (Copyright © 2021 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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36. Think of the Children: A Discussion of the Rationale for and Implications of the Perspective Used for EQ-5D-Y Health State Valuation.
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Lipman SA, Reckers-Droog VT, and Kreimeier S
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- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Objectives: The recently published EQ-5D-Y valuation protocol prescribes the general public values EQ-5D-Y health states for a 10-year-old child. This child perspective differs from the individual perspective applied for valuation of adult EQ-5D instruments. This article discusses the rationale for and implications of applying a child perspective for EQ-5D-Y health state valuation., Methods: This article was informed by an exploration of the normative and empirical literature on health state valuation. We identified and summarized key discussion points in a narrative review., Results: Although valuing EQ-5D-Y health states from an individual perspective is feasible, it may be problematic for several reasons. The use of a child perspective implies that-rather than valuing one's own health-someone else's health is valued. This may require the projection of one's own beliefs, expectations, and preferences on others, which could change the decision processes underlying the elicited preferences. Furthermore, because preferences are obtained for a 10-year-old child, it is unclear if this given age as well as other (missing) information on the described child beneficiary (should) affect valuation of EQ-5D-Y health states., Conclusions: The change from an individual to a child perspective in the valuation of EQ-5D-Y will likely lead to differences in utilities. This has implications for the estimation of incremental health-related quality-of-life gains in economic evaluations of health technologies for children and adolescents and therefore might affect reimbursement decisions. Further research is necessary for gaining insight into the extent to which this impact is normatively and empirically justified., (Copyright © 2021 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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37. An exploration of methods for obtaining 0 = dead anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values.
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Shah KK, Ramos-Goñi JM, Kreimeier S, and Devlin NJ
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Child, Female, Health Status, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Economic, Patient Preference, United Kingdom, Young Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Decision Support Techniques, Quality-Adjusted Life Years
- Abstract
Objectives: Discrete choice experiments (DCEs) can be used to obtain latent scale values for the EQ-5D-Y, but these require anchoring at 0 = dead to meet the conventions of quality-adjusted life year (QALY) estimation. The primary aim of this study is to compare four preference elicitation methods for obtaining anchors for latent scale EQ-5D-Y values., Methods: Four methods were tested: visual analogue scale (VAS), DCE (with a duration attribute), lag-time time trade-off (TTO) and the location-of-dead (LOD) approach. In computer-assisted personal interviews, UK general public respondents valued EQ-5D-3L health states from an adult perspective and EQ-5D-Y health states from a 10-year-old child perspective. Respondents completed valuation tasks using all four methods, under both perspectives., Results: 349 interviews were conducted. Overall, respondents gave lower values under the adult perspective compared to the child perspective, with some variation across methods. The mean TTO value for the worst health state (33333) was about equal to dead in the child perspective and worse than dead in the adult perspective. The mean VAS rescaled value for 33333 was also higher in the child perspective. The DCE produced positive child perspective values and negative adult perspective values, though the models were not consistent. The LOD median rescaled value for 33333 was negative under both perspectives and higher in the child perspective., Discussion: There was broad agreement across methods. Potential criteria for selecting a preferred anchoring method are presented. We conclude by discussing the decision-making circumstances under which utilities and QALY estimates for children and adults need to be commensurate to achieve allocative efficiency.
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- 2020
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38. International Valuation Protocol for the EQ-5D-Y-3L.
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Ramos-Goñi JM, Oppe M, Stolk E, Shah K, Kreimeier S, Rivero-Arias O, and Devlin N
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- Age Factors, Child, Choice Behavior, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Humans, Pilot Projects, Health Status, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
The EQ-5D-Y-3L is a generic, health-related, quality-of-life instrument for use in younger populations. Some methodological studies have explored the valuation of children's EQ-5D-Y-3L health states. There are currently no published value sets available for the EQ-5D-Y-3L that are appropriate for use in a cost-utility analysis. The aim of this article was to describe the development of the valuation protocol for the EQ-5D-Y-3L instrument. There were several research questions that needed to be answered to develop a valuation protocol for EQ-5D-Y-3L health states. Most important of these were: (1) Do we need to obtain separate values for the EQ-5D-Y-3L, or can we use the ones from the EQ-5D-3L? (2) Whose values should we elicit: children or adults? (3) Which valuation methods should be used to obtain values for child's health states that are anchored in Full health = 1 and Dead = 0? The EuroQol Research Foundation has pursued a research programme to provide insight into these questions. In this article, we summarized the results of the research programme concluding with the description of the features of the EQ-5D-Y-3L valuation protocol. The tasks included in the protocol for valuing EQ-5D-Y-3L health states are discrete choice experiments for obtaining the relative importance of dimensions/levels and composite time-trade-off for anchoring the discrete choice experiment values on 1 = Full Health and 0 = Dead. This protocol is now available for use by research teams to generate EQ-5D-Y-3L value sets for their countries allowing the implementation of a cost-utility analysis for younger populations.
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- 2020
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39. [Development of the German version of EQ-5D-Y-5L to measure health-related quality of life in children and adolescents: Identification of response labels and pilot testing].
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Kreimeier S and Greiner W
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- Adolescent, Child, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Health Status, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Objective: EQ-5D-Y-3L is a generic, youth-specific instrument to measure health-related quality of life (HRQoL). It contains five dimensions with three severity levels each. The aim of this study was to identify response levels to extend the German EQ-5D-Y version to four or five severity levels (4L or 5L) and to conduct a pilot test of both versions., Methods: In phase 1, we reviewed existing youth-specific HRQoL instruments and conducted focus group interviews with healthy children and adolescents to identify potential new labels. In individual sorting and response scaling interviews, participants aged 8 to 15 years rated the severity of the identified labels. Based on the results, a 4L and a 5L version were developed. In phase 2, the feasibility of those versions was tested in cognitive interviews with healthy children and adolescents as well as those with a health condition., Results: In phase 1, 12 to 16 labels were identified for each dimension. These were rated by 64 children and adolescents in the sorting and response scaling interviews. The included labels covered different severity levels of health impairments. In phase 2, 88% of the 33 children and adolescents preferred the 5L version as it was easier for them to report on their own health in more detail., Conclusion: Involving the target group of children and adolescents, a German EQ-5D-Y version with five severity levels was developed (EQ-5D-Y-5L) that can be used in children and adolescents aged 8 to 15 years. However, the psychometric properties of the instrument need further investigation. In addition, value sets need to be to developed before the questionnaire is suitable for all fields of application., (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier GmbH.)
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- 2019
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40. EQ-5D-Y-5L: developing a revised EQ-5D-Y with increased response categories.
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Kreimeier S, Åström M, Burström K, Egmar AC, Gusi N, Herdman M, Kind P, Perez-Sousa MA, and Greiner W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Female, Focus Groups, Germany, Humans, Language, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, Health Status, Psychometrics methods, Quality of Life psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Purpose: EQ-5D-Y is a generic measure of health status for children and adolescents aged 8-15 years. Originally, it has three levels of severity in each dimension (3L). This study aimed to develop a descriptive system of EQ-5D-Y with an increased number of severity levels and to test comprehensibility and feasibility., Methods: The study was conducted in Germany, Spain, Sweden and the UK. In Phase 1, a review of existing instruments and focus group interviews were carried out to create a pool of possible labels for a modified severity classification. Participants aged 8-15 rated the severity of the identified labels in individual sorting and response scaling interviews. In Phase 2, preliminary 4L and 5L versions were constructed for further testing in cognitive interviews with healthy participants aged 8-15 years and children receiving treatment for a health condition., Results: In Phase 1, a total of 233 labels was generated, ranging from 37 (UK) to 79 labels (Germany). Out of these, 7 to 16 possible labels for each dimension in the different languages were rated in 255 sorting and response scaling interviews. Labels covered an appropriate range of severity on the health continuum in all countries. In Phase 2, the 5L version was generally preferred (by 68-88% of the participants per country) over the 4L version., Conclusions: This multinational study has provided a version of the EQ-5D-Y with 5 severity levels in each dimension. This extended version (EQ-5D-Y-5L) requires testing its psychometric properties and its performance compared to that of the original EQ-5D-Y-3L.
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- 2019
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41. EQ-5D-Y as a Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument for Children and Adolescents: The Instrument's Characteristics, Development, Current Use, and Challenges of Developing Its Value Set.
- Author
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Kreimeier S and Greiner W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Age Factors, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Adolescent Health, Child Health, Health Status Indicators, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Objectives: Interest in the measurement of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children and adolescents has been increasing, and appropriate instruments are required for this target group. This article focuses on the EQ-5D-Y instrument, presenting an overview of its characteristics, development, and current use, and includes a discussion of methodological and conceptual issues related to the valuation of child health and the development of an EQ-5D-Y value set., Methods: This article brings together the experiences of the research team that developed and validated the EQ-5D-Y, supplemented by information derived from EQ-5D-Y study registrations on the EuroQol Group's website., Results: EQ-5D-Y is a child-specific and age-appropriate measure of HRQoL. Study registration data show that the instrument's use has steadily increased since its first publication. It has been used in various types of studies and in different disease areas. Currently there is no value set for EQ-5D-Y, and so its use in cost-utility analysis (CUA) is limited. There are methodological and conceptual issues that affect the design of valuation studies for child health. Issues that are discussed include the need for separate value sets for children and adolescents, the choice of appropriate reference samples and valuation techniques, and the framing of the tasks., Conclusions: Research on EQ-5D-Y and its use has increased in the last years. Further research is required to clarify methodological issues regarding health state valuation in children and adolescents. This will support the development of a value set for EQ-5D-Y and the use of EQ-5D-Y in CUA., (Copyright © 2019 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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42. Valuation of EuroQol Five-Dimensional Questionnaire, Youth Version (EQ-5D-Y) and EuroQol Five-Dimensional Questionnaire, Three-Level Version (EQ-5D-3L) Health States: The Impact of Wording and Perspective.
- Author
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Kreimeier S, Oppe M, Ramos-Goñi JM, Cole A, Devlin N, Herdman M, Mulhern B, Shah KK, Stolk E, Rivero-Arias O, and Greiner W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Caregivers, Child, Death, England, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Netherlands, Spain, Young Adult, Adolescent Health, Attitude, Child Health, Communication, Health Status, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Background: Valuations of health states were affected by the wording of the two instruments (EQ-5D-3L and EQ-5D-Y) and by the perspective taken (child or adult)., Objectives: There is a growing demand for value sets for the EQ-5D-Y (EQ-5D instrument for younger populations). Given the similarities between EQ-5D-Y and EQ-5D-3L, we investigated whether valuations of health states were affected by the differences in wording between the two instruments and by the perspective taken in the valuation exercise (child or adult)., Study Design: Respondents were randomly assigned to EQ-5D-3L or EQ-5D-Y (instrument) and further into two groups that either valued health states for an adult or for a 10-year-old child (perspective). The valuation tasks were composite time trade-off (C-TTO) and discrete choice experiments (DCE), including comparisons with death (DCE + death). Members of the adult general population in four countries (Germany, Netherlands, Spain, England) participated in computer-assisted personal interviews., Methods: Two-way multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) and post hoc tests were used to compare C-TTO responses and chi-square tests were conducted to compare DCE + death valuations., Results: A significant interaction effect between instrument and perspective for C-TTO responses was found. Significant differences by perspective (adult and child) occurred only for the EQ-5D-3L. Significant differences in values between instruments (EQ-5D-3L and EQ-5D-Y) occurred only for the adult perspective. Both significant results were confirmed by the DCE + death results. When comparing EQ-5D-3L for adult perspective and EQ-5D-Y for child perspective, values were also significantly different., Conclusions: The results identified an interaction effect between wording of the instrument and perspective on elicited values, suggesting that current EQ-5D-3L value sets should not be employed to assign values to EQ-5D-Y health states., (Copyright © 2018 ISPOR–The Professional Society for Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. [Measuring patient satisfaction in integrated healthcare projects--a pilot study with a modified ZAP questionnaire].
- Author
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Braun S, Kreimeier S, and Greiner W
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Biostatistics, Germany, Humans, Insurance, Health, Middle Aged, Pilot Projects, Young Adult, Delivery of Health Care standards, Patient Satisfaction, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Analysing the quality of integrated healthcare, as a new form of care, measurement of patient satisfaction becomes more and more important. However, there is a lack of standardised instruments of questionnaires for integrated network structures that could be used to measure and compare the satisfaction of participating insured persons. This gap should be closed by the study at hand, by arranging an exemplary measurement of satisfaction in the integrated care project OPTI-MuM. Because of the specific offers provided by the OPTI-MuM project, an existing questionnaire from the ambulatory sector had to be modified. A random sample of 1,000 insured individuals that have been enrolled in the project until now was interviewed. The response rate was 46.6%. In general, the survey respondents were very much satisfied with the provided integrated healthcare services. 75% of the respondents were 'very satisfied' or 'rather satisfied' with the range of services offered within the OPTI-MuM project. In addition, about 80% of the respondents would again participate in the project and recommend it. But the survey also demonstrated that there is potential for improving the provision of information. The study shows that the OPTI-MuM project is effective regarding the satisfaction of the participants. The questionnaire should be used for measuring satisfaction in comparable healthcare projects in order to enable a better classification of the results of this study.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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