275 results on '"Ware JE"'
Search Results
2. IR1 METHODS FOR PSYCHOMETRIC AND CLINICAL EVALUATIONS OF CAT-BASED MEASURES OF DISEASE IMPACT IN CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE (CKD)
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Lin, P, primary, Ware, JE, additional, Meyer, K, additional, Richardson, M, additional, and Bjorner, JB, additional
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- 2010
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3. PMC36 SYSTEMATIC REVIEW OF THE RESPONSIVNESS OF SF-36 HEALTH SURVEY MEASURES TO EFFICACIOUS PHARMACEUTICAL THERAPIES IN WELL-CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALS
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Ware, JE, primary and Frendl, DM, additional
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- 2010
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4. PPN5 ADVANCES IN PAIN MEASUREMENT: ITEM RESPONSE THEORY (IRT) BASED METHODS AND THE PAIN IMPACT QUESTIONNAIRE (PIQ-6)
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Becker, J, primary, Saris-Baglama, RN, additional, Bjorner, JB, additional, Kosinski, M, additional, and Ware, JE, additional
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- 2006
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5. PMD34: COMPARISON OF SF-36 SUMMARY AND PREFERENCE-BASED UTILITY SCORES ACROSS GROUPS DIFFERING IN DISEASE SEVERITY: RESULTS FROM THE MEDICARE HEALTH OUTCOMES SURVEY
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Ware, JE, primary, Bierman, AS, additional, Gandek, B, additional, Sinclair, SJ, additional, and Lawrence, WP, additional
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- 2003
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6. PPN8: PSYCHOMETRIC EVALUATION OF WIDELY USED PAIN MEASURES FOR PURPOSE OF COMPUTERIZED DYNAMIC PAIN ASSESSMENT
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Zhao, JH, primary, Ware, JE, additional, Kosinski, M, additional, Bjorner, JB, additional, and Turner-Bowker, D, additional
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- 2001
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7. PHB5 The Responsiveness of Disease-Specific And Generic Health Measures to Changes in the Severity of Osteoarthritis
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Zhao, S, primary, Dedhiya, S, additional, Kosinski, M, additional, and Ware, JE, additional
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- 1998
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8. PHB4 The Responsiveness of Disease-Specific And Generic Health Measures to Changes in the Severity of Rheumatoid Arthritis And to Treatment
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Kosinski, M, primary, Ware, JE, additional, Zhao, S, additional, and Dedhiya, S, additional
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- 1998
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9. Health-related quality-of-life findings for the prostate cancer prevention trial.
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Moinpour CM, Darke AK, Donaldson GW, Cespedes D, Johnson CR, Ganz PA, Patrick DL, Ware JE Jr, Shumaker SA, Meyskens FL, Thompson IM Jr, Moinpour, Carol M, Darke, Amy K, Donaldson, Gary W, Cespedes, Duane, Johnson, Christine R, Ganz, Patricia A, Patrick, Donald L, Ware, John E Jr, and Shumaker, Sally A
- Abstract
Background: The Prostate Cancer Prevention Trial (PCPT)-a randomized placebo-controlled study of the efficacy of finasteride in preventing prostate cancer-offered the opportunity to prospectively study effects of finasteride and other covariates on the health-related quality of life of participants in a multiyear trial.Methods: We assessed three health-related quality-of-life domains (measured with the Health Survey Short Form-36: Physical Functioning, Mental Health, and Vitality scales) via questionnaires completed by PCPT participants at enrollment (3 months before randomization), at 6 months after randomization, and annually for 7 years. Covariate data obtained at enrollment from patient-completed questionnaires were included in our model. Mixed-effects model analyses and a cross-sectional presentation at three time points began at 6 months after randomization. All statistical tests were two-sided.Results: For the physical function outcome (n = 16 077), neither the finasteride main effect nor the finasteride interaction with time were statistically significant. The effects of finasteride on physical function were minor and accounted for less than a 1-point difference over time in Physical Functioning scores (mixed-effect estimate = 0.07, 95% confidence interval [CI] = -0.28 to 0.42, P = .71). Comorbidities such as congestive heart failure (estimate = -5.64, 95% CI = -7.96 to -3.32, P < .001), leg pain (estimate = -2.57, 95% CI = -3.04 to -2.10, P < .001), and diabetes (estimate = -1.31, 95% CI = -2.04 to -0.57, P < .001) had statistically significant negative effects on physical function, as did current smoking (estimate = -2.34, 95% CI = -2.97 to -1.71, P < .001) and time on study (estimate = -1.20, 95% CI = -1.36 to -1.03, P < .001). Finasteride did not have a statistically significant effect on the other two dependent variables, mental health and vitality, either in the mixed-effects analyses or in the cross-sectional analysis at any of the three time points.Conclusion: Finasteride did not negatively affect SF-36 Physical Functioning, Mental Health, or Vitality scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
10. Improving the response choices on the Veterans SF-36 Health Survey role functioning scales: results from the Veterans Health Study.
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Kazis LE, Miller DR, Clark JA, Skinner KM, Lee A, Ren XS, Spiro A III, Rogers WH, and Ware JE Jr.
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- 2004
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11. Determining minimally important changes in generic and disease-specific health-related quality of life questionnaires in clinical trials of rheumatoid arthritis.
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Kosinski M, Zhao SZ, Dedhiya S, Osterhaus JT, and Ware JE Jr.
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- 2000
12. Organizational and financial characteristics of health plans: are they related to primary care performance?
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Safran DG, Rogers WH, Tarlov AR, Inui T, Taira DA, Montgomery JE, Ware JE, and Slavin CP
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- 2000
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13. Reliability and validity of French, German, Italian, Dutch, and UK English translations of the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey.
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Scott-Lennox JA, Wu AW, Boyer JG, Ware JE Jr., Scott-Lennox, J A, Wu, A W, Boyer, J G, and Ware, J E Jr
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- 1999
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14. Managed care.
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Ware JE Jr., Bayliss MS, Rogers WH, Kosinski M, and Tarlov AR
- Published
- 1996
15. Base-line quality-of-life assessment in the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project Breast Cancer Prevention Trial.
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Ganz PA, Day R, Ware JE Jr, Redmond C, Fisher B, Ganz, P A, Day, R, Ware, J E Jr, Redmond, C, and Fisher, B
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Background: The Breast Cancer Prevention Trial (BCPT) is a large, multicenter chemoprevention trial testing the efficacy of the antiestrogen drug tamoxifen for prevention of breast cancer and coronary heart disease in healthy women at high risk of breast cancer. The BCPT evolved from a series of prior studies in early stage breast cancer demonstrating the efficacy of tamoxifen in the prevention of systemic breast cancer recurrence and in the reduction of contralateral breast cancers.Purpose: The purpose of this article is to describe the methodologic considerations in the collection of health-related quality-of-life (HRQL) data in the BCPT and to present base-line HRQL data on the first 9749 participants.Methods: An HRQL questionnaire that included the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale, a symptom checklist, the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item short form (MOS-SF-36), and the MOS sexual problems questions was completed by participants in the BCPT at base line (prior to random assignment). Medical and demographic information, as well as projected risk of breast cancer, were collected as part of study eligibility. Descriptive and correlational data were examined for these study participants.Results: BCPT participants report high levels of functioning compared with U.S. general population norms but still report an average of 8.9 distinct symptoms during the past 4 weeks. Depression is less prevalent among the participants than in community samples, which reflects the exclusion of clinically depressed individuals. Sixty-five percent reported being sexually active in the past 6 months, with an age-related decline in sexual activity. Younger women reported fewer sexual problems than older women. There is a strong correlation between the two mental health measures, moderate to weak correlations between HRQL scales and levels of self-reported symptoms, and only weak correlations between measures of breast cancer risk and HRQL scales. The MOS-SF-36 scores were examined for three consecutive recruitment samples (0-6 months, 7-12 months, and 13-20 months), and the base-line scores were slightly better for the earliest group of participants.Conclusions: This article demonstrates the feasibility of collecting HRQL data in a large, multicenter, chemoprevention trial for women at high risk of breast cancer. The successful integration of HRQL data collection into this clinical trial attests to its value as a safety-monitoring end point and as an explicit and measurable outcome for the entire trial.Implications: HRQL data are important for studies in which healthy populations are involved and in which the potential for decrements in quality of life are real or perceived. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1995
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16. Characteristics of physicians with participatory decision-making styles.
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Kaplan SH, Greenfield S, Gandek B, Rogers WH, Ware JE Jr, Kaplan, S H, Greenfield, S, Gandek, B, Rogers, W H, and Ware, J E Jr
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Objectives: To identify physician and practice characteristics associated with a physician's propensity to involve patients in diagnostic and treatment decisions, or participatory decision-making style.Design: A representative cross-sectional sample of patients participating in the Medical Outcomes Study characterized each physician's style by using a self-reported questionnaire. A single averaged style score was generated for each physician. Style scores were compared among physicians who differed in age, sex, minority status, specialty, primary care training or training in interviewing skills, satisfaction with professional autonomy, and practice volume.Settings: Solo practices, multispecialty groups, and health maintenance organizations in Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles.Participants: 7730 patients sampled over 9 days from the practices of 300 physicians. Physicians were practicing general internal medicine, family medicine, cardiology, and endocrinology.Measurements: Participatory decision-making style was measured using a three-item scale on a questionnaire that was completed by patients after their office visit. Physician and practice characteristics were reported by physicians on self-administered questionnaires.Results: Among patients of physicians who were rated in the lowest (least participatory) quartile, one third changed physicians in the following year; among patients of physicians who were rated in the highest quartile, only 15% changed physicians. Higher scores were associated with greater patient satisfaction. Physicians who had had primary care training or training in interviewing skills scored higher than those without such training. Physicians in higher-volume practices were rated as less participatory than those in lower-volume practices. Physicians who were satisfied with their level of professional autonomy were rates as more participatory than those who were dissatisfied.Conclusion: Participatory decision-making style is influenced by physicians' background, training, practice volume, and professional autonomy. Because participatory decision-making style is related to patient satisfaction and loyalty to the physician, cost-containment strategies that reduce time with patients and decrease physician autonomy may result in suboptimal patient outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1996
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17. Adherence to health care regimens among elderly women... selected components of nurse practitioners' care.
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Chang BL, Uman GC, Linn LS, Ware JE, and Kane RL
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- 1985
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18. The effect of systematically varying components of nursing care on satisfaction in elderly ambulatory women.
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Chang BL, Uman GC, Linn LS, Ware JE Jr., and Kane RL
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- 1984
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19. The Wolbachia Genome of Brugia malayi: Endosymbiont Evolution within a Human Pathogenic Nematode
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Foster Jeremy, Ganatra Mehul, Kamal Ibrahim, Ware Jennifer, Makarova Kira, Ivanova Natalia, Bhattacharyya Anamitra, Kapatral Vinayak, Kumar Sanjay, Posfai Janos, Vincze Tamas, Ingram Jessica, Moran Laurie, Lapidus Alla, Omelchenko Marina, Kyrpides Nikos, Ghedin Elodie, Wang Shiliang, Goltsman Eugene, Joukov Victor, Ostrovskaya Olga, Tsukerman Kiryl, Mazur Mikhail, Comb Donald, Koonin Eugene, and Slatko Barton
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Bioinformatics/Computational Biology ,Evolution ,Genetics/Genomics/Gene Therapy ,Infectious Diseases ,Microbiology ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Complete genome DNA sequence and analysis is presented for Wolbachia, the obligate alpha-proteobacterial endosymbiont required for fertility and survival of the human filarial parasitic nematode Brugia malayi. Although, quantitatively, the genome is even more degraded than those of closely related Rickettsia species, Wolbachia has retained more intact metabolic pathways. The ability to provide riboflavin, flavin adenine dinucleotide, heme, and nucleotides is likely to be Wolbachia's principal contribution to the mutualistic relationship, whereas the host nematode likely supplies amino acids required for Wolbachia growth. Genome comparison of the Wolbachia endosymbiont of B. malayi (wBm) with the Wolbachia endosymbiont of Drosophila melanogaster (wMel) shows that they share similar metabolic trends, although their genomes show a high degree of genome shuffling. In contrast to wMel, wBm contains no prophage and has a reduced level of repeated DNA. Both Wolbachia have lost a considerable number of membrane biogenesis genes that apparently make them unable to synthesize lipid A, the usual component of proteobacterial membranes. However, differences in their peptidoglycan structures may reflect the mutualistic lifestyle of wBm in contrast to the parasitic lifestyle of wMel. The smaller genome size of wBm, relative to wMel, may reflect the loss of genes required for infecting host cells and avoiding host defense systems. Analysis of this first sequenced endosymbiont genome from a filarial nematode provides insight into endosymbiont evolution and additionally provides new potential targets for elimination of cutaneous and lymphatic human filarial disease.
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- 2005
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20. Multiple meanings: how pediatric health survey items are understood by clinicians and parents of children with and without disabilities.
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Saris-Baglama RN, Raczek AE, Derosa MA, Dumas HM, Fragala-Pinkham MA, and Ware JE Jr.
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- 2006
21. Comparing the performance of physical and social functioning survey items in children with and without disabilities.
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Derosa MA, Raczek AE, Saris-Baglama RN, Dumas HM, Fragala-Pinkham MA, and Ware JE Jr.
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- 2006
22. Development of item banks for three participation domains.
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Gandek B, Sinclair SJ, Bjorner JB, and Ware JE Jr.
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- 2005
23. PHB5The Responsiveness of Disease-Specific and Generic Health Measures to Changes in the Severity of Osteoarthritis
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Zhao, S, Dedhiya, S, Kosinski, M, and Ware, JE
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OBJECTIVE:To compare the responsiveness of arthritisspecific and generic health outcome measures in relation to changes in the severity of osteoarthritis (OA). Clinical trial patients (n = 1,177) were assessed at baseline and again after two weeks of treatment. Criterion measures of change in severity included physician global assessment, knee pain on weight bearing, knee pain on motion, and patient global assessment. METHODS:The responsiveness of each disease-specific and generic measure was estimated independently using the relative validity (RV) methodology, which compares F-ratios for average changes in specific and generic measures across groups differing in the amount of change in the criterion variables. RV coefficients estimate how each measure responded, relative to the best measure (RV = 1.0). OA-specific measures were based on the WOMAC questionnaire. Generic outcome measures included eight scales, physical and mental summary measures, and arthritis-specific health index (ASHI) scored from the SF-36 Health Survey. RESULTS:The SF-36 ASHI was most valid (RV = 1.0) for 3 of the 4 clinical criteria, followed by the SF-36 bodily pain (BP) scale (RV = .74–.98) for two of the clinical criterion. SF-36 physical health (physical functioning, role physical, physical summary) and social functioning scales were consistently more valid (RV > .30) than the SF-36 mental health scales (RV > .30). The WOMAC total scale score was more valid (RV = .91–1.0) than any of the three WOMAC subscales. With the exception of the SF-36 ASHI and BP scales, the WOMAC pain (RV = .80–.83), physical functioning (RV = .76–.95), and stiffness (RV = .61–.70) subscales were more valid than SF-36 scales. CONCLUSION:This study replicates results from previous studies showing that arthritis-specific scoring of the generic SF-36 health profile increases its responsiveness to changes in arthritis severity.
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- 1998
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24. PHB4The Responsiveness of Disease-Specific and Generic Health Measures to Changes in the Severity of Rheumatoid Arthritis and to Treatment
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Kosinski, M, Ware, JE, Zhao, S, and Dedhiya, S
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OBJECTIVE: To compare the responsiveness of arthritisspecific and generic health outcome measures in relation to changes in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) severity and to treatment. Clinical trial patients (n = 315) were assessed at baseline and again after two weeks of treatment. Criterion measures of severity change included physician global assessment, duration of morning stiffness, number of tender and swelling joints, functional capacity classification, visual analogue pain scale, and patient global assessment. METHODS:The responsiveness of each disease-specific and generic measure was estimated independently using the relative validity (RV) methodology, which compares F-ratios for average changes in specific and generic measures across groups differing in the amount of change in the criterion variables and treatment. RV coefficients estimate how each measure responded, relative to the best measure (RV = 1.0). An RA-specific measure was based on the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ). Generic measures included eight scales, two summary measures, and an arthritis-specific health index (ASHI) scored from the SF-36 Health Survey. RESULTS:The SF-36 ASHI was most valid (RV = 1.0) for 4 of the 8 criteria. The SF-36 bodily pain (BP) scale was most valid (RV = 1.0) for 2 of the 8 criteria, including treatment. The SF-36 vitality scale was most valid (RV = 1.0) for 1 of the 8 criteria. SF-36 scales measuring physical health were consistently more valid (RV > .30) than scales measuring mental health (RV < .20). The HAQ was highly valid for 2 of the 8 criteria (RV = .89–.92) and responded moderately well to 4 other criteria (RV = .28–.49). CONCLUSION:The responsiveness of the arthritis-specific scoring of the SF-36 health profile to changes in severity of rheumatoid arthritis was equal to or better than the generically scored SF-36 health profile and disease-specific Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ).
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- 1998
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25. Gender differences in medical treatment: the case of physician-prescribed activity restrictions.
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Safran DG, Rogers WH, Tarlov AR, McHorney CA, and Ware JE Jr.
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A growing scientific literature highlights concern about the influence of social bias in medical care. Differential treatment of male and female patients has been among the documented concerns. Yet, little is known about the extent to which differential treatment of male and female patients reflects the influence of social bias or of more acceptable factors, such as different patient preferences or different anticipated outcomes of care. This paper attempts to ascertain the underlying basis for an observed differential in physicians' tendency to advice activity restrictions for male and female patients. We explore the extent to which the gender-based treatment differential is attributable to: (1) patients' health profile, (2) patients' role responsibilities, (3) patients' illness behaviors, and (4) physician characteristics. These four categories of variables correspond to four prominent social science hypotheses concerning gender differences in health and health care utilization (i.e, biological basis hypothesis, fixed role hypothesis, socialization hypothesis, physician bias hypothesis). Data are drawn from the Medical Outcomes Study (MOS), a longitudinal observational study of 1546 patients of 349 physicians practicing in three U.S. cities. Multivariate logistic regression is used to evaluate the likelihood of physician-prescribed activity restrictions for male and female patients, and to explore the absolute and relative influence of patient and physician factors on the observed treatment differential. Results reveal that the odds of prescribed activity restrictions are 3.6 times higher for female patients than for males with equivalent characteristics. The observed differential is not explained by differences in male and female patients' health or role responsibilities. Gender differences in illness behavior and physician gender biases both appear to contribute to the observed differential. Female patients exhibit more illness behavior than males, and these behaviors increase physicians' tendency to prescribe activity restrictions. After accounting for illness behavior differences and all other factors, the odds of prescribed activity restrictions among female patients of male physicians is four times that of equivalent male patients of those physicians. Medical practice, education, and research must strive to identify and remove the likely unconscious role of social bias in medical decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1997
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26. The validity of single-item measures of health-related quality of life across groups differing in acute respiratory symptom severity.
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Smith AB, Ware JE Jr, Aluko P, and Kulasekaran A
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- Humans, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Surveys and Questionnaires, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Aged, Acute Disease, Young Adult, United States, Adolescent, Cough psychology, Quality of Life, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Purpose: Practical considerations precluding health-related quality of life (HRQOL) monitoring in population and clinical research have spawned development of improved items for more brief surveys of frequently measured HRQOL outcomes. The aim of this study was to validate the use of the Quality of Life General (QGEN-8), a shorter 8-item alternative to the longer 36-item short form (SF)-36 Health Survey for measuring the same eight HRQOL domains across groups of adults with varying severity of acute respiratory symptoms, such as cough and sore throat., Methods: National Opinion Research Center (NORC) representative probability (N = 1,648) and supplemental opt-in (N = 5,915) U.S. adult samples were surveyed cross-sectionally online in 2020. Parallel analyses compared QGEN-8 and SF-36 estimates of group means for each of eight matching profile domains and summary physical and mental scores across groups differing in severity of acute symptoms and chronic respiratory conditions using analysis of covariance (ANCOVAs) controlling for socio-demographics and presence of chronic respiratory conditions., Results: In support of discriminant validity, ANCOVA estimates of QGEN-8 means with SF-36 estimates revealed the same patterns of declining HRQOL with the presence and increasing severity of symptoms and chronic condition severity., Conclusion: QGEN-8
® shows satisfactory validity and warrants further testing in cross-sectional and longitudinal population and clinical survey research as a more practical method for estimating group differences in SF-36 profile and summary component HRQOL scores., (© 2024. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2024
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27. The Association Between Physical Distancing Behaviors to Avoid COVID-19 and Health-Related Quality of Life in Immunocompromised and Nonimmunocompromised Individuals: Patient-Informed Protocol for the Observational, Cross-Sectional EAGLE Study.
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Williams P, Herring TA, Yokota RTC, Maia T, Venkatesan S, Marcus JC, Settergren G, Arnetorp S, Lloyd A, Severens JL, Varni JW, Dixon S, Hamusankwa L, Powell PA, Taylor S, Ware JE Jr, and Krol M
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Adult, Male, Female, United States epidemiology, United Kingdom epidemiology, Child, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 epidemiology, Quality of Life, Physical Distancing, Immunocompromised Host immunology
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Background: Immunocompromised individuals are known to respond inadequately to SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, placing them at high risk of severe or fatal COVID-19. Thus, immunocompromised individuals and their caregivers may still practice varying degrees of social or physical distancing to avoid COVID-19. However, the association between physical distancing to avoid COVID-19 and quality of life has not been comprehensively evaluated in any study., Objective: We aim to measure physical distancing behaviors among immunocompromised individuals and the association between those behaviors and person-centric outcomes, including health-related quality of life (HRQoL) measures, health state utilities, anxiety and depression, and work and school productivity impairment., Methods: A patient-informed protocol was developed to conduct the EAGLE Study, a large cross-sectional, observational study, and this paper describes that protocol. EAGLE is designed to measure distancing behaviors and outcomes in immunocompromised individuals, including children (aged ≥6 mo) and their caregivers, and nonimmunocompromised adults in the United States and United Kingdom who report no receipt of passive immunization against COVID-19. We previously developed a novel self- and observer-reported instrument, the Physical Distancing Scale for COVID-19 Avoidance (PDS-C19), to measure physical distancing behavior levels cross-sectionally and retrospectively. Using an interim or a randomly selected subset of the study population, the PDS-C19 psychometric properties will be assessed, including structural validity, internal consistency, known-group validity, and convergent validity. Associations (correlations) will be assessed between the PDS-C19 and validated HRQoL-related measures and utilities. Structural equation modeling and regression will be used to assess these associations, adjusting for potential confounders. Participant recruitment and data collection took place from December 2022 to June 2023 using direct-to-patient channels, including panels, clinician referral, patient advocacy groups, and social media, with immunocompromising diagnosis confirmation collected and assessed for a randomly selected 25% of immunocompromised participants. The planned total sample size is 3718 participants and participant-caregiver pairs. Results will be reported by immunocompromised status, immunocompromising condition category, country, age group, and other subgroups., Results: All data analyses and reporting were planned to be completed by December 2023. Results are planned to be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals in 2024-2025., Conclusions: This study will quantify immunocompromised individuals' physical distancing behaviors to avoid COVID-19 and their association with HRQoL as well as health state utilities., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): RR1-10.2196/52643., (©Paul Williams, Timothy A Herring, Renata T C Yokota, Tiago Maia, Sudhir Venkatesan, James C Marcus, Gabriella Settergren, Sofie Arnetorp, Andrew Lloyd, Johan L Severens, James W Varni, Sharon Dixon, Lweendo Hamusankwa, Philip A Powell, Sylvia Taylor, John E Ware Jr, Marieke Krol. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 13.08.2024.)
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- 2024
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28. Impact of treatment of hyperkalaemia on quality of life: design of a prospective observational cohort study of long-term management of hyperkalaemia in patients with chronic kidney disease or chronic heart failure in Japan.
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Shibagaki Y, Yamazaki H, Wakita T, Ware JE, Wang J, Onishi Y, Yajima T, Sada KE, Yamamoto Y, and Fukuhara S
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- Humans, Quality of Life, Prospective Studies, Japan, Chronic Disease, Potassium, Hyperkalemia drug therapy, Hyperkalemia etiology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy, Heart Failure complications, Heart Failure drug therapy
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Introduction: Hyperkalaemia (HK) is a frequent complication in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and/or chronic heart failure (CHF). HK must be managed, both to protect patients from its direct clinical adverse outcomes and to enable treatment with disease-modifying therapies including renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibitors. However, the experiences of patients undergoing treatment of HK are not clearly understood. Optimising treatment decisions and improving long-term patient management requires a better understanding of patients' quality of life (QOL). Thus, the aims of this research are: (1) to describe treatment patterns and the impact of treatment on a patient's QOL, (2) to study the relationships between treatment patterns and the impact of treatment on a patient's QOL and (3) to study the relationships between the control of serum potassium (S-K) and the impact of treatment on a patient's QOL, in patients with HK., Methods and Analysis: This is a prospective cohort study with 6 months of follow-up in 30-40 outpatient nephrology and cardiology clinics in Japan. The participants will be 350 patients with CKD or CHF who received their first potassium binders (PB) prescription to treat HK within the previous 6 months. Medical records will be used to obtain information on S-K, on treatment of HK with PBs and with diet, and on the patients' characteristics. To assess the impact of treatment on a patient's QOL, questionnaires will be used to obtain generic health-related QOL, CKD-specific and CHF-specific QOL, and PB-specific QOL. Multivariable regression models will be used to quantify how treatment patterns and S-K control are related to the impact of treatment on a patient's QOL., Ethics and Dissemination: Institutional review boards at all participating facilities review the study protocol. Patient consent will be obtained. The results will be published in international journals., Trial Registration Number: NCT05297409., Competing Interests: Competing interests: TW and YY have consulted for the Institute for Health Outcomes and Process Evaluation research. Under a contract with Kyoto University, consultation fees by HY and SF were paid to Kyoto University from Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited and Magmitt Pharmaceutical Company. JW and YO are employees of the Institute for Health Outcomes & Process Evaluation research. TY is an employee and a stock holder of AstraZeneca K.K. JEW are has received consulting fees from AstraZeneca K.K. YS has received honoraria from AstraZeneca K.K., Otsuka Pharma Co., and Kyowa Kirin Co. HY has received lecture fee from Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K., Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma, Kowa Company Limited, AstraZeneka K.K., and Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited. K-ES is a member of the speakers’ bureau of Glaxo Smith Kline K.K. YY has received consultancy fees from Nippon Shinyaku Co, and personal fees from Sun Pharma, Asahi Kasei Pharma, TORAY, and Ono, outside the submitted work., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2023
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29. Foreword to Journal of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons PROMs Special Issue: Why Use PROMs in Orthopaedic Surgery?
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Ware JE Jr
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- 2023
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30. The effects of greater frequency of two most prevalent bothersome acute respiratory symptoms on health-related quality of life in the 2020 US general population.
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Ware JE Jr, Coutinho G, Smith AB, Tselenti E, and Kulasekaran A
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- Adult, Humans, Middle Aged, Quality of Life psychology, Cough epidemiology, Health Surveys, Pharyngitis epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Purpose: Upper respiratory tract infections (URTI) and related symptoms are widespread and a common reason for visiting primary care with cough and sore throat being most prevalent. Despite their impact on daily activities, no studies have explored the impact on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in representative general populations. We aimed to understand the short-term impact of the two most prevalent URTI symptoms on HRQOL., Methods: Online 2020 surveys including acute (≤ 4 weeks) respiratory symptoms (sore throat and cough) and SF-36
® health survey (all with 4-week recall) were analysed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) in comparison with adult US population norms. Linear T-score transformation of SF-6D utility (ranging from 0 to 1) enabled direct comparisons with SF-36., Results: In total, 7563 US adults responded (average age: 52 years; range: 18-100 years). Sore throat and cough lasting at least several days were experienced by 14% and 22% participants, respectively. Chronic respiratory conditions were reported by 22% of the sample. A clear and consistent pattern of group HRQOL means declining significantly (p < 0.001) for acute cough and sore throat symptom presence and severity. Declines were observed on SF-36 physical (PCS) and mental component (MCS) and health utility (SF-6D) scores controlling for covariates. Those reporting respiratory symptoms 'most days' declined ≥ 0.5 standard deviation (minimal important difference [MID]) worse with averages at the 19th and 34th centiles for cough on the PCS and MCS, and 21st to 26th centile for sore throat., Conclusion: Declines in HRQOL with acute cough and sore throat symptoms consistently exceeded MID standards and should not be ignored as self-limiting without intervention. Future studies on early self-care for symptom relief and its implications on HRQOL and health economics would be valuable to understand the benefits on healthcare burden and need for updating treatment guidelines., (© 2023. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2023
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31. Validation of a new instrument for measuring disease-specific quality of life: A pilot study among patients with chronic kidney disease and hyperkalemia.
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Fukuhara S, Yamazaki H, Wakita T, Ware JE Jr, Wang J, Onishi Y, Yajima T, Sada K, Yamamoto Y, and Shibagaki Y
- Abstract
Background: To prepare for a longitudinal study of the effects of potassium-lowering treatment on quality of life (QOL), we quantified the validity of a new disease-specific instrument for measuring QOL, using data from patients who had hyperkalemia (HK) due to chronic kidney disease (CKD) or chronic heart failure, and were also being treated with potassium binders (PBs)., Methods: In this cross-sectional study, the participants were 98 patients at five outpatient clinics in Japan. The outcome measures were the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item short-form (SF-36), a widely used generic measure of QOL, and the Quality of Life Disease-specific Impact Scale (QDIS-7), a recently-developed disease-specific measure of QOL. Internal-consistency reliability was quantified, and factor analysis was done to confirm hypothesized QOL dimensions. Validation tests used two external criteria: CKD stage, and PB formulation. PB formulation was used because different formulations are associated with different degrees of patients' burden. Using a previously-described method, we computed the relative validity (RV) of the two measures., Results: Two factor scoring of the SF-36 and one factor scoring of the QDIS-7, as standardized from previous studies, were confirmed. The RVs showed that the QDIS-7 was much more valid than the SF-36, for discriminating between groups defined clinically (by CKD stage), and also between groups defined by PB formulation. Reliability was satisfactory: 0.73-0.95 for the SF-36 and 0.86 for the QDIS-7., Conclusions: The QDIS-7 with CKD or PB attributions was more valid than the SF-36 for measuring the effects of CKD and of PB formulation on QOL., Competing Interests: TW and YY have act as consultants for the Institute for Health Outcomes & Process Evaluation research. Under contracts between Kyoto University and the Institute for Health Outcomes & Process Evaluation research, fees for consulting with HY and SF were paid to Kyoto University. JWang and YO are employees of the Institute for Health Outcomes & Process Evaluation research. TY is an employee and a stock holder of AstraZeneca K.K. JWare received consulting fees from AstraZeneca K.K. YS has received honoraria from AstraZeneca K.K., Otsuka Pharma Co. and Kyowa Kirin Co. KS is a member of the speakers’ bureau of Glaxo Smith Kline K.K., (© 2023 Society for Clinical Epidemiology.)
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- 2022
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32. Improving multimorbidity measurement using individualized disease-specific quality of life impact assessments: predictive validity of a new comorbidity index.
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McEntee ML, Gandek B, and Ware JE
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- Adult, Chronic Disease, Humans, Multimorbidity, Surveys and Questionnaires, Multiple Chronic Conditions, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background: Interpretation of health-related quality of life (QOL) outcomes requires improved methods to control for the effects of multiple chronic conditions (MCC). This study systematically compared legacy and improved method effects of aggregating MCC on the accuracy of predictions of QOL outcomes., Methods: Online surveys administered generic physical (PCS) and mental (MCS) QOL outcome measures, the Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI), an expanded chronic condition checklist (CCC), and individualized QOL Disease-specific Impact Scale (QDIS) ratings in a developmental sample (N = 5490) of US adults. Controlling for sociodemographic variables, regression models compared 12- and 35-condition checklists, mortality vs. population QOL-weighting, and population vs. individualized QOL weighting methods. Analyses were cross-validated in an independent sample (N = 1220) representing the adult general population. Models compared estimates of variance explained (adjusted R
2 ) and model fit (AIC) for generic PCS and MCS across aggregation methods at baseline and nine-month follow-up., Results: In comparison with sociodemographic-only regression models (MCS R2 = 0.08, PCS = 0.09) and Charlson CCI models (MCS R2 = 0.12, PCS = 0.16), increased variance was accounted for using the 35-item CCC (MCS R2 = 0.22, PCS = 0.31), population MCS/PCS QOL weighting (R2 = 0.31-0.38, respectively) and individualized QDIS weighting (R2 = 0.33 & 0.42). Model R2 and fit were replicated upon cross-validation., Conclusions: Physical and mental outcomes were more accurately predicted using an expanded MCC checklist, population QOL rather than mortality CCI weighting, and individualized rather than population QOL weighting for each reported condition. The 3-min combination of CCC and QDIS ratings (QDIS-MCC) warrant further testing for purposes of predicting and interpreting QOL outcomes affected by MCC., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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33. Quality of life in adults with autism spectrum disorder: influence of age, sex, and a controlled, randomized mindfulness-based stress reduction pilot intervention.
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Braden BB, Pagni BA, Monahan L, Walsh MJM, Dixon MV, Delaney S, Ballard L, and Ware JE Jr
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Pilot Projects, Quality of Life psychology, Social Support, Stress, Psychological, Autism Spectrum Disorder therapy, Mindfulness
- Abstract
Purpose: Adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) consistently report worse functional health and well-being, compared to neurotypical (NT) peers. In a series of studies, we aimed to elucidated the effects of sex, age, and their interaction on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and evaluated the effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) for improving health-, disability-, and autism-related QoL, with possible sex and age outcome moderators, in adults with ASD., Methods: Study 1 used the 36-Item Short Form Survey to compare mental and physical HRQoL composite scores in adults with ASD (n = 67) and matched NT adults (n = 66). Study 2 was a randomized pilot evaluation of the effect of MBSR, compared to an active control intervention with social support and relaxation education (support/education; n = 56), on the World Health Organization QoL BREF, Disability, and Autism-Specific scales in adults with ASD., Results: In Study 1, we replicated findings that mental HRQoL is worse in both men and women with ASD, compared to NT counterparts, but physical HRQoL is only worse in women with ASD. We present novel findings that older age is associated with better mental HRQoL in women with ASD only. In Study 2, MBSR improved disability-related QoL in adults with ASD over and above the support/education intervention, but both interventions improved mental HRQoL. Lastly, both interventions were more effective for HRQoL improvements in women with ASD., Conclusion: Findings encourage precision medicine approaches tailored to age and sex groups for best HRQoL outcomes in adults with ASD., Clinicaltrials: gov Identifier: NCT04017793., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.)
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- 2022
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34. Predicting the 10-year risk of death from other causes in men with localized prostate cancer using patient-reported factors: Development of a tool.
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Frendl DM, FitzGerald G, Epstein MM, Allison JJ, Sokoloff MH, and Ware JE
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- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Comorbidity, Follow-Up Studies, Health Surveys statistics & numerical data, Humans, Life Tables, Male, Marital Status statistics & numerical data, Neoplasm Staging, Prostatic Neoplasms pathology, Risk Assessment methods, Risk Factors, SEER Program statistics & numerical data, Self Report statistics & numerical data, Smoking epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Cause of Death, Models, Statistical, Prostatic Neoplasms epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To develop a tool for estimating the 10-year risk of death from other causes in men with localized prostate cancer., Subjects and Methods: We identified 2,425 patients from the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results-Medicare Health Outcomes Survey database, age <80, newly diagnosed with clinical stage T1-T3a prostate cancer from 1/1/1998-12/31/2009, with follow-up through 2/28/2013. We developed a Fine and Gray competing-risks model for 10-year other cause mortality considering age, patient-reported comorbid medical conditions, component scores and items of the SF-36 Health Survey, activities of daily living, and sociodemographic characteristics. Model discrimination and calibration were compared to predictions from Social Security life table mortality risk estimates., Results: Over a median follow-up of 7.7 years, 76 men died of prostate-specific causes and 465 died of other causes. The strongest predictors of 10-year other cause mortality risk included increasing age at diagnosis, higher approximated Charlson Comorbidity Index score, worse patient-reported general health (fair or poor vs. excellent-good), smoking at diagnosis, and marital status (all other vs. married) (all p<0.05). Model discrimination improved over Social Security life tables (c-index of 0.70 vs. 0.59, respectively). Predictions were more accurate than predictions from the Social Security life tables, which overestimated risk in our population., Conclusions: We provide a tool for estimating the 10-year risk of dying from other causes when making decisions about treating prostate cancer using pre-treatment patient-reported characteristics., Competing Interests: JW received unrestricted research grants from British American Tobacco (Investments) Limited for smoking-related quality of life research which did not fund this work. JW also discloses employment by John Ware Research Group, a commercial company. The other authors have no other competing interests. These disclosures do not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials. There are no patents, products in development or marketed products associated with this research to declare.
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- 2020
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35. Developing a New Version of the SF-6D Health State Classification System From the SF-36v2: SF-6Dv2.
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Brazier JE, Mulhern BJ, Bjorner JB, Gandek B, Rowen D, Alonso J, Vilagut G, and Ware JE
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- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cost-Benefit Analysis standards, Cross-Sectional Studies, Cultural Competency, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain epidemiology, Psychometrics, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, Reproducibility of Results, Social Participation, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Cost-Benefit Analysis methods, Health Status, Mental Health, Physical Functional Performance, Surveys and Questionnaires standards
- Abstract
Objective: The objective of this study was to develop the classification system for version of the SF-6D (SF-6Dv2) from the SF-36v2. SF-6Dv2 is an improved version of SF-6D, one of the most widely used generic measures of health for the calculation of quality-adjusted life years., Study Design and Setting: A 3-step process was undertaken to generate a new classification system: (1) factor analysis to establish dimensionality; (2) Rasch analysis to understand item performance; and (3) tests of differential item function. To evaluate robustness, Rasch analyses were performed in multiple subsets of 2 large cross-sectional datasets from recently discharged hospital patients and online patient samples., Results: On the basis of factor analysis, other psychometric evidence, cross-cultural considerations, and amenability to valuation, the 6-dimension classification used in SF-6D was maintained. SF-6Dv2 resulted in the following modifications to SF-6D: a simpler classification of physical function with clearer separation between levels; a more detailed 5-level description of role limitations; using negative wording to describe vitality; and using pain severity rather than pain interference., Conclusions: The SF-6Dv2 classification system describes more distinct levels of health than SF-6D, changes the descriptions used for a number of dimensions and provides clearer wording for health state valuation. The second stage of the study has developed a utility value set using discrete choice methods so that the measure can be used in health technology assessment. Further work should investigate the psychometric characteristics of the new instrument.
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- 2020
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36. Item selection for 12-item short forms of the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS-12) and Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS-12).
- Author
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Gandek B, Roos EM, Franklin PD, and Ware JE Jr
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disability Evaluation, Female, Health Status Indicators, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Hip rehabilitation, Osteoarthritis, Knee rehabilitation, Pain Measurement methods, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Reproducibility of Results, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip rehabilitation, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee rehabilitation, Osteoarthritis, Hip surgery, Osteoarthritis, Knee surgery, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
- Abstract
Objective: To develop 12-item short forms (KOOS-12, HOOS-12) of the 42-item Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) and 40-item Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS) that represent the full-length instruments sufficiently to provide joint-specific pain, function and quality of life (QOL) domain and summary joint impact scores. This paper describes KOOS-12 and HOOS-12 item selection. Subsequent papers will examine KOOS-12 and HOOS-12 reliability, validity and responsiveness., Design: Items were selected based on qualitative information from patients, clinicians and KOOS/HOOS translators and analysis of data from 1,395 knee osteoarthritis (OA) and 1,281 hip OA patients from the FORCE-TJR cohort who completed KOOS or HOOS before and after total joint replacement (TJR). Item response theory models and computerized adaptive test (CAT) simulations were used to identify items that best measured patients' levels of pain and function pre- and post-TJR. KOOS-12/HOOS-12 items were selected based on content, coverage of a wide measurement range, high item information, item usage in CAT simulations, scale-level properties (reliability, validity, responsiveness), and qualitative information., Results: KOOS-12 and HOOS-12 each included a pain frequency item and three items measuring pain during increasingly difficult activities (sitting/lying, walking, up/down stairs); function items about standing, rising from sitting, getting in/out of a car, and twisting/pivoting (KOOS-12) or walking on an uneven surface (HOOS-12); and the original 4-item QOL scale., Conclusions: This study demonstrated the benefits of examining patient-reported outcome measures using modern psychometric methods, to create short forms with diverse content that provide domain-specific and summary joint impact scores., (Copyright © 2019 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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37. A 12-item short form of the Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS-12): tests of reliability, validity and responsiveness.
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Gandek B, Roos EM, Franklin PD, and Ware JE Jr
- Subjects
- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Hip rehabilitation, Pain Measurement methods, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Reproducibility of Results, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip rehabilitation, Osteoarthritis, Hip surgery, Patient Reported Outcome Measures
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate reliability, validity and responsiveness of HOOS-12, a 12-item short form of the 40-item Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS). HOOS-12 provides Pain, Function and Quality of Life (QOL) scale scores and a summary hip impact score., Design: Data from 1,273 FORCE-TJR hip osteoarthritis (OA) patients who completed HOOS before and six and 12 months after total hip replacement (THR) were analyzed. HOOS-12 includes a pain frequency item and three items measuring pain during increasingly difficult (sitting/lying, walking, stairs) activities; function items about standing, rising from sitting, getting in/out of a car, and walking on an uneven surface; and the 4-item HOOS QOL scale. Percent computable scale scores, floor and ceiling effects, internal consistency reliability, validity (scale correlations, tests of known groups validity using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)), and responsiveness (effect sizes (ES), standardized response means (SRM)) were compared for HOOS-12, full-length HOOS, HOOS-PS and HOOS, JR., Results: Internal consistency reliability was above 0.70 for all HOOS-12 scales and above 0.90 for the HOOS-12 Summary score. Validity and responsiveness of HOOS-12 Pain, Function and QOL scales were satisfactory and reached similar conclusions as comparable full-length HOOS scales. The HOOS-12 Summary score was highly responsive in discriminating between groups who differed in global ratings of post-THR change in physical capabilities and had high ES and SRM standardized response means., Conclusions: HOOS-12 was a reliable and valid alternative to HOOS in THR patients with moderate to severe OA and provided three domain-specific and summary hip impact scores with substantially reduced respondent burden., (Copyright © 2019 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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38. A 12-item short form of the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS-12): tests of reliability, validity and responsiveness.
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Gandek B, Roos EM, Franklin PD, and Ware JE Jr
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- Activities of Daily Living, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Exercise physiology, Female, Humans, Knee Joint physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Knee complications, Osteoarthritis, Knee physiopathology, Osteoarthritis, Knee rehabilitation, Pain etiology, Pain Measurement methods, Pain Measurement standards, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Recovery of Function, Reproducibility of Results, Severity of Illness Index, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee rehabilitation, Osteoarthritis, Knee surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate reliability, validity and responsiveness of KOOS-12, a 12-item short form of the 42-item Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) that provides Pain, Function and Quality of Life (QOL) scale scores and a summary knee impact score., Design: Data from 1,392 knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients from the FORCE-TJR research cohort who completed KOOS before and 6 and 12 months after total knee replacement (TKR) were analyzed. KOOS-12 includes a pain frequency item and three items measuring pain during increasingly difficult (sitting/lying, walking, stairs) activities; function items about standing, rising from sitting, getting in/out of a car, and twisting/pivoting; and the 4-item KOOS QOL scale. Percent computable scale scores, floor and ceiling effects, internal consistency reliability, validity (scale correlations, tests of known groups validity using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA)) and responsiveness (effect sizes, standardized response means) were compared for the KOOS-12, full-length KOOS, KOOS-PS and KOOS, JR., Results: Internal consistency reliability was above 0.70 for all KOOS-12 scales and ≥0.90 for the KOOS-12 Summary score. Validity and responsiveness of KOOS-12 Pain, Function and QOL scales was satisfactory and reached similar conclusions as comparable full-length KOOS scales. The KOOS-12 Summary score was most responsive in discriminating between groups who differed in global ratings of post-TKR change in physical capabilities and had the highest effect sizes and standardized response means., Conclusions: KOOS-12 was a reliable and valid alternative to KOOS in TKR patients with moderate to severe OA and provided three domain-specific and summary knee impact scores with substantially reduced respondent burden., (Copyright © 2019 Osteoarthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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39. Improving CKD-Specific Patient-Reported Measures of Health-Related Quality of Life.
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Ware JE Jr, Richardson MM, Meyer KB, and Gandek B
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Status, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Kidney Transplantation, Male, Middle Aged, Renal Dialysis, Young Adult, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Quality of Life, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic physiopathology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic psychology, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic therapy
- Abstract
Background: Patient-reported outcome measures that are more practical and clinically useful are needed for patients with CKD. We compared a new CKD-specific quality-of-life impact scale (CKD-QOL) with currently used measures., Methods: Patients ( n =485) in different treatment groups (nondialysis stages 3-5, on dialysis, or post-transplant) completed the kidney-specific CKD-QOL and Kidney Disease Quality of Life-36 (KDQOL-36) forms and the generic SF-12 Health Survey at baseline and 3 months. New items summarizing quality of life (QOL) impact attributed to CKD across six QOL domains yielded single impact scores from a six-item static (fixed-length) form and from computerized adaptive tests (CATs) with three to six items. Validity tests compared the CKD-QOL, KDQOL-36 (Burden, Effects, and Symptoms/Problems subscales), and generic SF-12 measures across groups in four tests of clinical status and clinician assessment of change (CKD-specific tests), and number of comorbidities. ANOVA was used to test for group mean differences, variances in each measure explained by groups, and relative validity (RV) in comparison with the referent KDQOL-36 Burden subscale., Results: KDQOL-36 and CKD-QOL measures generally discriminated better than generic SF-12v2 measures. The pattern of variances across CKD-specific tests comparing validity favored CKD-QOL two-fold over KDQOL-36. Two RV test results confirmed CKD-QOL improvements over the referent KDQOL scale. Results for static and CAT CKD-QOL forms were similar. SF-12 Physical and KDQOL-36 Symptoms scores worsened with increasing comorbid condition counts., Conclusions: Overall, compared with the KDQOL-36, the new approach to summarizing CKD-specific QOL impact performed better across multiple tests of validity. CAT surveys were more efficient than static surveys., (Copyright © 2019 by the American Society of Nephrology.)
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- 2019
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40. Validity and Responsiveness of the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score: A Comparative Study Among Total Knee Replacement Patients.
- Author
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Gandek B and Ware JE Jr
- Subjects
- Aged, Cohort Studies, Female, Health Surveys methods, Humans, Knee Injuries epidemiology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Osteoarthritis, Knee epidemiology, Reproducibility of Results, Treatment Outcome, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Knee trends, Health Surveys standards, Knee Injuries diagnosis, Knee Injuries surgery, Osteoarthritis, Knee diagnosis, Osteoarthritis, Knee surgery
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate validity and responsiveness of the Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) in relation to other patient-reported outcome measures before and after total knee replacement (TKR)., Methods: Pre-TKR and 6-month post-TKR data from 1,143 patients in a US joint replacement cohort were used to compare the KOOS, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), and the SF-36 Health Survey (SF-36). Validity was evaluated with multiple methods, including correlations of pre-TKR scale scores and analysis of variance models that used pre-TKR data to compare the relative validity of scales in discriminating between groups differing in assistive walking device use and number of comorbid conditions. Validity was also evaluated by using post-TKR minus pre-TKR change scores to assess relative validity of scales in discriminating between groups rating themselves as better, same, or worse (BSW) in their capability to do activities at 6 months. Responsiveness also was described using effect sizes and standardized response means., Results: In support of convergent and discriminant validity, KOOS scale scores were worse for patients using an assistive device but only declined weakly with increasing comorbid conditions. While all knee-specific scales discriminated between BSW groups, the KOOS quality of life (QOL) scale was significantly better (P < 0.05) than all measures except the SF-36 physical component summary. KOOS QOL also had the highest effect size, while SF-36 measures had lower effect sizes and standardized response means. KOOS pain and symptoms scales discriminated better than WOMAC pain and stiffness scales among BSW groups., Conclusion: KOOS scales were valid and responsive in this cohort of US TKR patients. KOOS QOL performed particularly well in capturing aggregate knee-specific outcomes., (© 2017, American College of Rheumatology.)
- Published
- 2017
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41. Varying the item format improved the range of measurement in patient-reported outcome measures assessing physical function.
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Liegl G, Gandek B, Fischer HF, Bjorner JB, Ware JE Jr, Rose M, Fries JF, and Nolte S
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- Adult, Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics methods, Disability Evaluation, Patient Reported Outcome Measures, Rheumatic Diseases, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Background: Physical function (PF) is a core patient-reported outcome domain in clinical trials in rheumatic diseases. Frequently used PF measures have ceiling effects, leading to large sample size requirements and low sensitivity to change. In most of these instruments, the response category that indicates the highest PF level is the statement that one is able to perform a given physical activity without any limitations or difficulty. This study investigates whether using an item format with an extended response scale, allowing respondents to state that the performance of an activity is easy or very easy, increases the range of precise measurement of self-reported PF., Methods: Three five-item PF short forms were constructed from the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS®) wave 1 data. All forms included the same physical activities but varied in item stem and response scale: format A ("Are you able to …"; "without any difficulty"/"unable to do"); format B ("Does your health now limit you …"; "not at all"/"cannot do"); format C ("How difficult is it for you to …"; "very easy"/"impossible"). Each short-form item was answered by 2217-2835 subjects. We evaluated unidimensionality and estimated a graded response model for the 15 short-form items and remaining 119 items of the PROMIS PF bank to compare item and test information for the short forms along the PF continuum. We then used simulated data for five groups with different PF levels to illustrate differences in scoring precision between the short forms using different item formats., Results: Sufficient unidimensionality of all short-form items and the original PF item bank was supported. Compared to formats A and B, format C increased the range of reliable measurement by about 0.5 standard deviations on the positive side of the PF continuum of the sample, provided more item information, and was more useful in distinguishing known groups with above-average functioning., Conclusions: Using an item format with an extended response scale is an efficient option to increase the measurement range of self-reported physical function without changing the content of the measure or affecting the latent construct of the instrument.
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- 2017
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42. Standardizing disease-specific quality of life measures across multiple chronic conditions: development and initial evaluation of the QOL Disease Impact Scale (QDIS®).
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Ware JE Jr, Gandek B, Guyer R, and Deng N
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Young Adult, Chronic Disease psychology, Cost of Illness, Quality of Life, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Background: To document the development and evaluation of the Quality of life Disease Impact Scale (QDIS®), a measure that standardizes item content and scoring across chronic conditions and provides a summary, norm-based QOL impact score for each disease., Methods: A bank of 49 disease impact items was constructed from previously-used descriptions of health impact to represent ten frequently-measured quality of life (QOL) content areas and operational definitions successfully utilized in generic QOL surveys. In contrast to health in general, all items were administered with attribution to a specific disease (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, angina, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease (CKD), diabetes, asthma, or COPD). Responses from 5418 adults were analyzed as five disease groups: arthritis, cardiovascular, CKD, diabetes, and respiratory. Unidimensionality, item parameter and scale-level invariance, reliability, validity and responsiveness to change during 9-month follow-up were evaluated by disease group and for all groups combined using multi-group confirmatory factor analysis (MGCFA), item response theory (IRT) and analysis of variance methods. QDIS was normed in an independent chronically ill US population sample (N = 4120)., Results: MGCFA confirmed a 1-factor model, justifying a summary score estimated using equal parameters for each item across disease groups. In support of standardized IRT-based scoring, correlations were very high between disease-specific and standardized IRT item slopes (r = 0.88-0.96), thresholds (r = 0.93-0.99) and person-level scores (r ≥ 0.99). Internal consistency, test-retest and person-level IRT reliability were consistently satisfactory across groups. In support of interpreting QDIS as a disease-specific measure, in comparison with generic measures, QDIS consistently discriminated markedly better across disease severity levels, correlated higher with other disease-specific measures in cross-sectional tests, and was more responsive in comparisons of groups with better, same or worse evaluations of disease-specific outcomes at the 9-month follow-up., Conclusions: Standardization of content and scoring across diseases was shown to be justified psychometrically and enabled the first summary measure of disease-specific QOL impact normed in the chronically ill population. This disease-specific approach substantially improves discriminant validity and responsiveness over generic measures and provides a basis for better understanding the relative QOL impact of multiple chronic conditions in research and clinical practice.
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- 2016
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43. The Validity of Disease-specific Quality of Life Attributions Among Adults with Multiple Chronic Conditions.
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Ware JE Jr, Gandek B, and Allison J
- Abstract
Background: A crucial assumption underlying all disease-specific quality of life (QOL) measures, that patients can validly differentiate a specific disease in the presence of multiple chronic conditions , has not been tested using multiple methods. Our objective was to evaluate the convergent and discriminant validity of QOL attributions to specific diseases among adults with multiple chronic conditions (MCC)., Methods: Adults age 18 and older (N=4,480) sampled from eight pre-identified condition groups (asthma, COPD, angina/MI with angina, congestive heart failure, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis) completed an Internet survey. Comorbid conditions were determined using a 35-condition checklist. Product-moment correlations were analyzed separately by pre-identified condition group using the multitrait-multimethod of construct validation, where traits were defined by 9-26 conditions and each condition was measured by two methods: disease severity rating and Disease-specific Quality of Life Impact Scale (QDIS) global rating. A third method (symptom or clinical marker) was available for the eight pre-identified conditions. Convergent validity was supported when correlations among different methods of measuring the same condition (trait) were substantial (r≥0.40). Discriminant validity was supported when correlations between the same and different methods of measuring different conditions were significantly lower than corresponding convergent correlations., Results: In support of convergent validity, 22 of 24 convergent correlations were substantial (r=0.38-0.84, median=0.53). In support of discriminant validity, 833 of 924 tests (90.2%) yielded significantly higher convergent than discriminant correlations across the eight pre-identified conditions. Exceptions to this pattern of results were most often observed for comorbid conditions within the same clinical area., Conclusions: Collectively, convergent and discriminant test results support the construct validity of disease-specific QOL impact attributions across MCC within the eight pre-identified conditions. Noteworthy exceptions should be considered when interpreting some specific QOL impact attributions and warrant further study. Pursuit of a summary disease-specific QOL impact score standardized across MCC is recommended.
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- 2016
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44. Preliminary Evaluation of a New German Translated Tobacco Quality of Life Impact Tool to Discriminate Between Healthy Current and Former Smokers and to Explore the Effect of Switching Smokers to a Reduced Toxicant Prototype Cigarette.
- Author
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Kulasekaran A, Proctor C, Papadopoulou E, Shepperd CJ, Guyer R, Gandek B, and Ware JE Jr
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Single-Blind Method, Smoking epidemiology, Smoking Prevention, Nicotiana, Tobacco Products toxicity, Health Status Indicators, Quality of Life psychology, Smoking psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires standards, Tobacco Use Cessation Devices, Translating
- Abstract
Background: Assessment of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is well established in clinical research, but ceiling effects in validated tools might prevent detection of changes in well respondents. Tobacco Quality of Life Impact Tool (TQOLITv1) uses conceptual and psychometric advances to enhance detection of HRQoL changes., Methods: In a 6-month, forced-switch study, the German TQOLITv1 was assessed in healthy adult (age 23-55 years) current and matched former-smokers. At baseline, smokers were switched to reduced toxicant prototype (RTP) or conventional cigarette for 6 months. TQOLITv1 responses were collected at baseline, 3 and 6 months from current smokers whilst former smokers completed it at the latter two time points. TQOLITv1 includes SF-36v2 and new smoking-specific, physical and general-health measures., Results: Reliability at baseline was good (Cronbach's coefficient alpha > 0.70) for all measures. The baseline percentage with the best possible score (ceiling effect) for former and current smokers was substantially better for the new physical function than SF-36 physical function measure (35% vs. 59% at ceiling, respectively). New smoking-specific measures discriminated current from former smokers better than general health measures. Smoking-specific symptoms (r = 0.73) were more stable from baseline to 6 months than other measures (r = 0.38-0.54) particularly more than the SF-36 mental component score (r = 0.24). Although both product smoking groups worsened in most HRQoL measures, changes in general and smoking-specific HRQoL impact measures favored RTP smokers., Conclusions: The German TQOLITv1 is sufficiently reliable and valid to assess HRQoL and may be more useful than SF-36v2 in evaluation of interventions in well smoking populations including those consuming RTPs., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.)
- Published
- 2015
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45. Development of a Short Version of the Thyroid-Related Patient-Reported Outcome ThyPRO.
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Watt T, Bjorner JB, Groenvold M, Cramon P, Winther KH, Hegedüs L, Bonnema SJ, Rasmussen ÅK, Ware JE Jr, and Feldt-Rasmussen U
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- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Patient Outcome Assessment, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Quality of Life psychology, Thyroid Diseases psychology
- Abstract
Background: Thyroid diseases affect quality of life (QoL). The Thyroid-Related Patient-Reported Outcome (ThyPRO) is an international comprehensive well-validated patient-reported outcome, measuring thyroid-related QoL. The current version is rather long--85 items. The purpose of the present study was to develop an abbreviated version of the ThyPRO, with conserved good measurement properties., Methods: A cross-sectional (N = 907) and a longitudinal sample (N = 435) of thyroid patients were analyzed. A graded item response theory (IRT) model was fitted to the cross-sectional data. Short-form scales with three items were aimed for, by selecting items with best fit according to the IRT model, avoiding cross-culturally noninvariant items. Seven scales measuring mental and social well-being and function as well as one overall QoL impact item were analyzed in a bifactor model, to develop a supplementary composite score. Short-form scales were linked to original scales with IRT-based summed-score-linking. Agreement between the short and long form was estimated by agreement plots, intraclass correlations, and mean score levels. Responsiveness was compared by relative validity indices, clinical validity by ability to detect clinically relevant differences, and test-retest reliability by intra-class correlation., Results: One four-item scale was not abbreviated and one two-item scale was omitted from the short-form. For the 11 scales undergoing abbreviation, 10 with three and one with four items were developed. A bifactor model with good overall fit was fitted to the composite score, including the single QoL item. Responsiveness and clinical validity of the short-form scales were preserved, as were test-retest reliability (0.75-0.89). Short- versus long-form intraclass correlations were high (0.89-0.98), and the mean scale levels were similar., Conclusions: A 39-item version of the ThyPRO, with good measurement properties, was developed and is recommended for clinical use.
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- 2015
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46. Evaluation of smoking-specific and generic quality of life measures in current and former smokers in Germany and the United States.
- Author
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Ware JE Jr, Gandek B, Kulasekaran A, and Guyer R
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Self Report, United States, Young Adult, Health Surveys, Quality of Life psychology, Smoking psychology
- Abstract
Background: Health-related quality of life (QOL) surveys include generic measures that enable comparisons across conditions and measures that focus more specifically on one disease or condition. We evaluated the psychometric properties of German- and English-language versions of survey scales representing both types of measures in samples of current and former smokers., Methods: TQOLIT(™)v1 integrates new measures of smoking-specific symptoms and QOL impact attributed to smoking with generic SF-36 Health Survey measures. For purposes of evaluation, cross-sectional data were analyzed for two independent samples. Disease-free (otherwise healthy) adults ages 23-55 used a tablet to complete surveys in a clinical trial in Germany (125 current and 54 former smokers). Online general population surveys were completed in the US by otherwise healthy current and former smokers (N = 149 and 110, respectively). Evaluations included psychometric tests of assumptions underlying scale construction and scoring, score distributions, and reliability. Tests of validity included cross-sectional correlations and analyses of variance based on a conceptual framework and hypotheses for groups differing in self-reported smoking behavior (current versus former smoker, cigarettes per day (CPD)) and severity of smoking symptoms in both samples and, in the German trial only, clinical parameters of biomarkers of exposure., Results: Tests of scaling assumptions and internal consistency reliability (alpha = 0.71-0.79) of the smoking-specific measures were satisfactory, although ceiling effects attenuated correlations for former smokers in both samples. Correlational evidence supporting validity of smoking-specific symptom and impact measures included their substantial inter-correlation and higher correlations (than generic measures) with smoking behavior (favoring former over current groups) and CPD in both samples. In the German trial, both smoking-specific measures correlated significantly (p < 0.05) with all four biomarkers. QOL impact attributed to smoking correlated with the SF-36 mental but not physical summary measures in both samples., Conclusions: German- and English-language TQOLITv1 surveys have comparable and satisfactory psychometric properties. Cross-sectional tests, including correlations with four biomarkers, support the validity of the new smoking-specific measures for use in studies of otherwise healthy smokers. Smoking-specific measures consistently performed better than generic QOL measures in all tests of validity.
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- 2015
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47. Testing item response theory invariance of the standardized Quality-of-life Disease Impact Scale (QDIS(®)) in acute coronary syndrome patients: differential functioning of items and test.
- Author
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Deng N, Anatchkova MD, Waring ME, Han KT, and Ware JE Jr
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- Adult, Aged, Calibration, Chronic Disease psychology, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, Acute Coronary Syndrome psychology, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Purpose: The Quality-of-life (QOL) Disease Impact Scale (QDIS(®)) standardizes the content and scoring of QOL impact attributed to different diseases using item response theory (IRT). This study examined the IRT invariance of the QDIS-standardized IRT parameters in an independent sample., Method: The differential functioning of items and test (DFIT) of a static short-form (QDIS-7) was examined across two independent sources: patients hospitalized for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in the TRACE-CORE study (N = 1,544) and chronically ill US adults in the QDIS standardization sample. "ACS-specific" IRT item parameters were calibrated and linearly transformed to compare to "standardized" IRT item parameters. Differences in IRT model-expected item, scale and theta scores were examined. The DFIT results were also compared in a standard logistic regression differential item functioning analysis., Results: Item parameters estimated in the ACS sample showed lower discrimination parameters than the standardized discrimination parameters, but only small differences were found for thresholds parameters. In DFIT, results on the non-compensatory differential item functioning index (range 0.005-0.074) were all below the threshold of 0.096. Item differences were further canceled out at the scale level. IRT-based theta scores for ACS patients using standardized and ACS-specific item parameters were highly correlated (r = 0.995, root-mean-square difference = 0.09). Using standardized item parameters, ACS patients scored one-half standard deviation higher (indicating greater QOL impact) compared to chronically ill adults in the standardization sample., Conclusion: The study showed sufficient IRT invariance to warrant the use of standardized IRT scoring of QDIS-7 for studies comparing the QOL impact attributed to acute coronary disease and other chronic conditions.
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- 2015
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48. Energy, fatigue, or both? A bifactor modeling approach to the conceptualization and measurement of vitality.
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Deng N, Guyer R, and Ware JE Jr
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- Aged, Concept Formation, Emotions, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Surveys and Questionnaires, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Fatigue etiology, Quality of Life, Research Design statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: Vitality is an important domain reflecting both the physical and emotional components of health-related quality of life. Because of its complexity, it has been defined and measured both broadly and narrowly. We explored the dimensionality of a very comprehensive item bank hypothesized to measure vitality and its related concepts., Methods: Secondary analyses were conducted using the responses of 1,343 adults representative of the US general population to Internet-based surveys including 42 items compiled from multiple scales (e.g., SF-36 Vitality, PROMIS-Fatigue), covering a broad range of vitality-related content areas (energy, fatigue, and their interference with physical, mental, social activities, and quality of life). Exploratory and confirmatory factor models were evaluated independently using split-half samples. Bifactor model was used to assess the essential unidimensionality of the items, in comparison with traditional unidimensional, multidimensional, and hierarchical models. Method effects of a common scale or phrase were modeled via correlating errors., Results: The exploratory factor analysis identified one dominant factor. The confirmatory factor analysis identified a best-fitting (CFI = 0.964, RMSEA = 0.084) bifactor model with one general (vitality) and two group (energy and fatigue) factors, explaining 69, 3, and 4 % of total variance. Correlating errors accounting for the method effects were important in identifying the substantive dimensionality of the items., Conclusions: The bifactor model proved to be useful for evaluating the dimensionality of a complex construct. Results supported conceptualizing and measuring vitality as a unidimensional energy-fatigue construct. We encourage future studies comparing practical implications of measures based on the broader and narrower conceptualizations of vitality.
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- 2015
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49. Assessing health-related quality of life in patients with benign non-toxic goitre.
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Watt T, Cramon P, Frendl DM, and Ware JE Jr
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- Goiter psychology, Humans, Reproducibility of Results, Self Report, Treatment Outcome, Goiter therapy, Health Status, Quality of Life, Surveys and Questionnaires
- Abstract
Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) assessments are increasingly used to evaluate treatment effects and to shape the delivery of value based care. Valid generic and disease specific tools are available for quantifying HRQoL in patients with non-toxic goitre. However, few studies have applied these validated instruments to assess HRQoL in patients with benign non-toxic goitre. Limited evidence suggests that patients with non-toxic goitre have HRQoL impairments in multiple HRQoL domains. While the HRQoL-impact of non-toxic goitre may be small relative to other severely disabling medical conditions, treatment is almost exclusively elected for HRQoL indications. Thus better quantification of HRQoL, particularly at better (or more favorable) levels where many patients score, is essential. Web and mobile technologies have eased the ability to deliver surveys to patients. Routine consideration of HRQoL provides the opportunity to monitor the impact of treatment on the outcomes most meaningful for patients and the opportunity to help shape the delivery of value based health care., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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50. Treatment effectiveness of pasireotide on health-related quality of life in patients with Cushing's disease.
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Webb SM, Ware JE, Forsythe A, Yang M, Badia X, Nelson LM, Signorovitch JE, McLeod L, Maldonado M, Zgliczynski W, de Block C, Portocarrero-Ortiz L, and Gadelha M
- Subjects
- Adult, Double-Blind Method, Female, Humans, Male, Quality of Life, Somatostatin therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion drug therapy, Somatostatin analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Objective: Cushing's disease (CD) can significantly impair patients' health-related quality of life (HRQOL). This study investigated the treatment effectiveness of pasireotide on HRQOL of CD patients, and assessed the relationships between HRQOL and urinary free cortisol (UFC) and CD-related signs and symptoms., Design: In this phase III, randomized, double-blind study, patients with UFC ≥1.5×upper limit of normal (ULN) received s.c. pasireotide 600 or 900 μg twice daily. The trial primary endpoint was UFC at or below ULN at month 6 without dose titration. Open-label treatment continued through month 12. HRQOL was measured using the Cushing's Quality of Life Questionnaire (CushingQoL) instrument at baseline and follow-up visits until month 12 during which clinical signs and features of CD, and the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II), were also collected., Methods: Pearson's/Spearman's correlations between changes in CushingQoL and changes in clinical signs and symptoms were assessed. Changes in CushingQoL and the proportion of patients achieving a clinically meaningful improvement in CushingQoL were also compared among patients stratified by mean UFC (mUFC) control status (controlled, partially controlled, and uncontrolled) at month 6. Analyses were also conducted at month 12, with multivariable adjustment for baseline characteristics and CushingQoL., Results: Change in CushingQoL was significantly correlated with changes in mUFC (r=-0.40), BMI (r=-0.39), weight (r=-0.41), and BDI-II (r=-0.54) at month 12 but not at month 6. The percentage of CushingQoL responders at month 12 based on month 6 mUFC control status were as follows: 63, 58.8, and 37.9% in the controlled, partially controlled, and uncontrolled groups respectively. Adjusted CushingQoL scores at month 12 were 58.3 for controlled patients (Δ=11.5 vs uncontrolled, P=0.012) and 54.5 for partially controlled patients (Δ=7.7 vs uncontrolled, P=0.170)., Conclusions: Pasireotide treatment can result in a meaningful HRQOL improvement among those who complete a 12-month treatment period, most often among patients achieving biochemical control., (© 2014 European Society of Endocrinology.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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