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Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineSpecial issuepeer-review

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Standard

Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire. / Spencer, Sally; Jones, Paul W.
In: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, Vol. 169, 2004, p. A326.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineSpecial issuepeer-review

Harvard

Spencer, S & Jones, PW 2004, 'Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire', American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, vol. 169, pp. A326.

APA

Spencer, S., & Jones, P. W. (2004). Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 169, A326.

Vancouver

Spencer S, Jones PW. Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 2004;169:A326.

Author

Spencer, Sally ; Jones, Paul W. / Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire. In: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. 2004 ; Vol. 169. pp. A326.

Bibtex

@article{10a7d33ba4894f4ca3dfbf1825687703,
title = "Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire",
abstract = "AIM: To improve the psychometric properties of the St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) to enhance its reliability and sensitivity.METHOD: Examine the properties of each of the 50 questions using a combination of classical test theory and item-response theory (Rasch analysis) on a large population of COPD patients. Baseline data were taken from 5 studies giving a total of 3414 patients from 26 countries with a mean age of 65 years (range 39-89), 2455 were male, 1602 were smokers and the mean FEV1was 46% predicted (range 10-94%). Mean SGRQ Total score 49 (range 2-94). Sensitivity and internal consistency were measured in all 5 studies and questions that failed the psychometric criteria in at least 4 studies were defined as failures. Responsiveness (poor = unchanged response over 1 year in more than 90% of patients) was measured in 2 studies and items meeting the criteria in both studies were defined as unresponsive. Criterion validity was measured against SF36 scores in 1 study. Results[Table]Thirteen questions did not meet the criteria for inclusion in the revised version of the SGRQ. Tests using Rasch analysis showed that item responses were unrelated to gender, age or country. Rasch analysis also showed that response categories in the Symptoms component should be collapsed to improve their performance. ConclusionsThe SGRQ has demonstrated sensitivity to change within and between populations. Removal of unreliable items with poor psychometric properties should improve its sensitivity through an improved signal to noise ratio.Monday, May 24, 2004 8:15 AM",
author = "Sally Spencer and Jones, {Paul W}",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
volume = "169",
pages = "A326",
journal = "American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine",
issn = "1073-449X",
publisher = "AMER THORACIC SOC",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enhancing the psychometric performance of the St George's Respiratory Questionnaire

AU - Spencer, Sally

AU - Jones, Paul W

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - AIM: To improve the psychometric properties of the St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) to enhance its reliability and sensitivity.METHOD: Examine the properties of each of the 50 questions using a combination of classical test theory and item-response theory (Rasch analysis) on a large population of COPD patients. Baseline data were taken from 5 studies giving a total of 3414 patients from 26 countries with a mean age of 65 years (range 39-89), 2455 were male, 1602 were smokers and the mean FEV1was 46% predicted (range 10-94%). Mean SGRQ Total score 49 (range 2-94). Sensitivity and internal consistency were measured in all 5 studies and questions that failed the psychometric criteria in at least 4 studies were defined as failures. Responsiveness (poor = unchanged response over 1 year in more than 90% of patients) was measured in 2 studies and items meeting the criteria in both studies were defined as unresponsive. Criterion validity was measured against SF36 scores in 1 study. Results[Table]Thirteen questions did not meet the criteria for inclusion in the revised version of the SGRQ. Tests using Rasch analysis showed that item responses were unrelated to gender, age or country. Rasch analysis also showed that response categories in the Symptoms component should be collapsed to improve their performance. ConclusionsThe SGRQ has demonstrated sensitivity to change within and between populations. Removal of unreliable items with poor psychometric properties should improve its sensitivity through an improved signal to noise ratio.Monday, May 24, 2004 8:15 AM

AB - AIM: To improve the psychometric properties of the St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) to enhance its reliability and sensitivity.METHOD: Examine the properties of each of the 50 questions using a combination of classical test theory and item-response theory (Rasch analysis) on a large population of COPD patients. Baseline data were taken from 5 studies giving a total of 3414 patients from 26 countries with a mean age of 65 years (range 39-89), 2455 were male, 1602 were smokers and the mean FEV1was 46% predicted (range 10-94%). Mean SGRQ Total score 49 (range 2-94). Sensitivity and internal consistency were measured in all 5 studies and questions that failed the psychometric criteria in at least 4 studies were defined as failures. Responsiveness (poor = unchanged response over 1 year in more than 90% of patients) was measured in 2 studies and items meeting the criteria in both studies were defined as unresponsive. Criterion validity was measured against SF36 scores in 1 study. Results[Table]Thirteen questions did not meet the criteria for inclusion in the revised version of the SGRQ. Tests using Rasch analysis showed that item responses were unrelated to gender, age or country. Rasch analysis also showed that response categories in the Symptoms component should be collapsed to improve their performance. ConclusionsThe SGRQ has demonstrated sensitivity to change within and between populations. Removal of unreliable items with poor psychometric properties should improve its sensitivity through an improved signal to noise ratio.Monday, May 24, 2004 8:15 AM

M3 - Special issue

VL - 169

SP - A326

JO - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine

JF - American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine

SN - 1073-449X

ER -