Psychometric Characteristics of the Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Applied in the CENTER-TBI Study

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) may lead to impairments in various outcome domains. Since most instruments assessing these are only available in a limited number of languages, psychometrically validated translations are important for research and clinical practice. Thus, our aim was to investigate the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical medicine 2021-05, Vol.10 (11), p.2396
Hauptverfasser: Steinbuechel, Nicole von, Rauen, Katrin, Bockhop, Fabian, Covic, Amra, Krenz, Ugne, Plass, Anne Marie, Cunitz, Katrin, Polinder, Suzanne, Wilson, Lindsay, Steyerberg, Ewout W, Maas, Andrew I R, Menon, David, Wu, Yi-Jhen, Zeldovich, Marina, The Center-Tbi Participants And Investigators
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container_end_page
container_issue 11
container_start_page 2396
container_title Journal of clinical medicine
container_volume 10
creator Steinbuechel, Nicole von
Rauen, Katrin
Bockhop, Fabian
Covic, Amra
Krenz, Ugne
Plass, Anne Marie
Cunitz, Katrin
Polinder, Suzanne
Wilson, Lindsay
Steyerberg, Ewout W
Maas, Andrew I R
Menon, David
Wu, Yi-Jhen
Zeldovich, Marina
The Center-Tbi Participants And Investigators
description Traumatic brain injury (TBI) may lead to impairments in various outcome domains. Since most instruments assessing these are only available in a limited number of languages, psychometrically validated translations are important for research and clinical practice. Thus, our aim was to investigate the psychometric properties of the patient-reported outcome measures (PROM) applied in the CENTER-TBI study. The study sample comprised individuals who filled in the six-months assessments (GAD-7, PHQ-9, PCL-5, RPQ, QOLIBRI/-OS, SF-36v2/-12v2). Classical psychometric characteristics were investigated and compared with those of the original English versions. The reliability was satisfactory to excellent; the instruments were comparable to each other and to the original versions. Validity analyses demonstrated medium to high correlations with well-established measures. The original factor structure was replicated by all the translations, except for the RPQ, SF-36v2/-12v2 and some language samples for the PCL-5, most probably due to the factor structure of the original instruments. The translation of one to two items of the PHQ-9, RPQ, PCL-5, and QOLIBRI in three languages could be improved in the future to enhance scoring and application at the individual level. Researchers and clinicians now have access to reliable and valid instruments to improve outcome assessment after TBI in national and international health care.
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subjects Brain research
Classical test theory
Clinical medicine
Cognition & reasoning
Concussion
Generalized anxiety disorder
Language
Likert scale
Mental depression
Mental disorders
Mental health
patient-reported outcome measures
Patients
Post traumatic stress disorder
psychometric properties
Quality of life
Quantitative psychology
Questionnaires
Traumatic brain injury
title Psychometric Characteristics of the Patient-Reported Outcome Measures Applied in the CENTER-TBI Study
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