Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire

Abstract Background The Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE) was developed as a wrist joint specific measure of pain and disability and evidence of sound validity has been accumulated through classical psychometric methods. Rasch analysis (RA) has been endorsed as a newer method for analyzing the c...

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Main Authors: Saravanan Esakki, Joy C. MacDermid, Joshua I. Vincent, Tara L. Packham, David Walton, Ruby Grewal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-02-01
Series:Archives of Physiotherapy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40945-018-0046-z
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spelling doaj-f1f6f2687c5b4eac898e0dcd6c85f6d42020-11-24T20:51:28ZengBMCArchives of Physiotherapy2057-00822018-02-018111110.1186/s40945-018-0046-zRasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaireSaravanan Esakki0Joy C. MacDermid1Joshua I. Vincent2Tara L. Packham3David Walton4Ruby Grewal5School of Physical Therapy, Western UniversitySchool of Physical Therapy, Western UniversitySchool of Physical Therapy, Western UniversitySchool of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster UniversitySchool of Physical Therapy, Western UniversityThe Hand and Upper Limb Centre, St Joseph’s Health CentreAbstract Background The Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE) was developed as a wrist joint specific measure of pain and disability and evidence of sound validity has been accumulated through classical psychometric methods. Rasch analysis (RA) has been endorsed as a newer method for analyzing the clinical measurement properties of self-report outcome measures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the PRWE using Rasch modeling. Methods We employed the Rasch model to assess overall fit, response scaling, individual item fit, differential item functioning (DIF), local dependency, unidimensionality and person separation index (PSI). A convenience sample of 382 patients with distal radius fracture was recruited from the hand and upper limb clinic at large academic healthcare organization, London, Ontario, Canada, 6-month post-injury scores of the PRWE was used. RA was conducted on the 3 subscales (pain, specific activities, and usual activities) of the PRWE separately. Results The pain subscale adequately fit the Rasch model when item 4 “Pain - When it is at its worst” was deleted to eliminate non-uniform DIF by age group, and item 5 “How often do you have pain” was rescored by collapsing into 8 intervals to eliminate disordered thresholds. Uniform DIF for “Use my affected hand to push up from the chair” (by work status) and “Use bathroom tissue with my affected hand” (by injured hand) was addressed by splitting the items for analysis. After background rescoring of 2 items in pain subscale, 2 items in specific activities and 3 items in usual activities, all three subscales of the PRWE were well targeted and had high reliability (PSI = 0.86). These changes provided a unidimensional, interval-level scaled measure. Conclusion Like a previous analysis of the Patient-Rated Wrist and Hand Evaluation, this study found the PRWE could be fit to the Rasch model with rescoring of multiple items. However, the modifications required to achieve fit were not the same across studies, our fit statistics also suggested one of the pain items should be deleted. This study adds to the pool of evidence supporting the PRWE, but cannot confidently provide a Rasch-based scoring algorithm.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40945-018-0046-zPRWERasch analysisPatient-reported outcome measureDistal radius fracture
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saravanan Esakki
Joy C. MacDermid
Joshua I. Vincent
Tara L. Packham
David Walton
Ruby Grewal
spellingShingle Saravanan Esakki
Joy C. MacDermid
Joshua I. Vincent
Tara L. Packham
David Walton
Ruby Grewal
Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
Archives of Physiotherapy
PRWE
Rasch analysis
Patient-reported outcome measure
Distal radius fracture
author_facet Saravanan Esakki
Joy C. MacDermid
Joshua I. Vincent
Tara L. Packham
David Walton
Ruby Grewal
author_sort Saravanan Esakki
title Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
title_short Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
title_full Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
title_fullStr Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
title_full_unstemmed Rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
title_sort rasch analysis of the patient-rated wrist evaluation questionnaire
publisher BMC
series Archives of Physiotherapy
issn 2057-0082
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract Background The Patient-Rated Wrist Evaluation (PRWE) was developed as a wrist joint specific measure of pain and disability and evidence of sound validity has been accumulated through classical psychometric methods. Rasch analysis (RA) has been endorsed as a newer method for analyzing the clinical measurement properties of self-report outcome measures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the PRWE using Rasch modeling. Methods We employed the Rasch model to assess overall fit, response scaling, individual item fit, differential item functioning (DIF), local dependency, unidimensionality and person separation index (PSI). A convenience sample of 382 patients with distal radius fracture was recruited from the hand and upper limb clinic at large academic healthcare organization, London, Ontario, Canada, 6-month post-injury scores of the PRWE was used. RA was conducted on the 3 subscales (pain, specific activities, and usual activities) of the PRWE separately. Results The pain subscale adequately fit the Rasch model when item 4 “Pain - When it is at its worst” was deleted to eliminate non-uniform DIF by age group, and item 5 “How often do you have pain” was rescored by collapsing into 8 intervals to eliminate disordered thresholds. Uniform DIF for “Use my affected hand to push up from the chair” (by work status) and “Use bathroom tissue with my affected hand” (by injured hand) was addressed by splitting the items for analysis. After background rescoring of 2 items in pain subscale, 2 items in specific activities and 3 items in usual activities, all three subscales of the PRWE were well targeted and had high reliability (PSI = 0.86). These changes provided a unidimensional, interval-level scaled measure. Conclusion Like a previous analysis of the Patient-Rated Wrist and Hand Evaluation, this study found the PRWE could be fit to the Rasch model with rescoring of multiple items. However, the modifications required to achieve fit were not the same across studies, our fit statistics also suggested one of the pain items should be deleted. This study adds to the pool of evidence supporting the PRWE, but cannot confidently provide a Rasch-based scoring algorithm.
topic PRWE
Rasch analysis
Patient-reported outcome measure
Distal radius fracture
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40945-018-0046-z
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