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Electronic versus paper-based assessment of health-related quality of life specific to HIV disease: Reliability study of the PROQOL-HIV questionnaire

Authors :
Duracinsky, M.
Lalanne, C.
Goujard, C.
Herrmann, S.
Cheung-Lung, C.
Brosseau, J -P
Schwartz, Y.
Chassany, O.
Duracinsky, M.
Lalanne, C.
Goujard, C.
Herrmann, S.
Cheung-Lung, C.
Brosseau, J -P
Schwartz, Y.
Chassany, O.
Source :
Duracinsky, M., Lalanne, C., Goujard, C., Herrmann, S. <
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Electronic patient-reported outcomes (PRO) provide quick and usually reliable assessments of patients&#39; health-related quality of life (HRQL). Objective: An electronic version of the Patient-Reported Outcomes Quality of Life-human immunodeficiency virus (PROQOL-HIV) questionnaire was developed, and its face validity and reliability were assessed using standard psychometric methods. Methods: A sample of 80 French outpatients (66% male, 52/79; mean age 46.7 years, SD 10.9) were recruited. Paper-based and electronic questionnaires were completed in a randomized crossover design (2-7 day interval). Biomedical data were collected. Questionnaire version and order effects were tested on full-scale scores in a 2-way ANOVA with patients as random effects. Test-retest reliability was evaluated using Pearson and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC, with 95% confidence interval) for each dimension. Usability testing was carried out from patients&#39; survey reports, specifically, general satisfaction, ease of completion, quality and clarity of user interface, and motivation to participate in follow-up PROQOL-HIV electronic assessments. Results: Questionnaire version and administration order effects (N=59 complete cases) were not significant at the 5% level, and no interaction was found between these 2 factors (P=.94). Reliability indexes were acceptable, with Pearson correlations greater than .7 and ICCs ranging from .708 to .939; scores were not statistically different between the two versions. A total of 63 (79%) complete patients&#39; survey reports were available, and 55% of patients (30/55) reported being satisfied and interested in electronic assessment of their HRQL in clinical follow-up. Individual ratings of PROQOL-HIV user interface (85%-100% of positive responses) confirmed user interface clarity and usability. Conclusions: The electronic PROQOL-HIV introduces minor modifications to the original paper-based version, following International Society for Pharmacoeconomics a

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Duracinsky, M., Lalanne, C., Goujard, C., Herrmann, S. <
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1359362860
Document Type :
Electronic Resource