The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS
Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered respon...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
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1997 |
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Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 |
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in: Quality of life research - 1992, 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 |
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volume:6 ; year:1997 ; month:01 ; pages:0-0 ; extent:1 |
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NLEJ195672402 |
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520 | |a Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. | ||
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(DE-627)NLEJ195672402 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS 1997 1 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Wu, A. W. oth Jacobson, D. L. oth Berzon, R. A. oth Revicki, D. A. oth van der Horst, C. oth Fichtenbaum, C. J. oth Saag, M. S. oth Lynn, L. oth Hardy, D. oth Feinberg, J. oth in Quality of life research 1992 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 (DE-627)NLEJ188989161 (DE-600)2008960-0 1573-2649 nnns volume:6 year:1997 month:01 pages:0-0 extent:1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 6 1997 1 0-0 1 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ195672402 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS 1997 1 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Wu, A. W. oth Jacobson, D. L. oth Berzon, R. A. oth Revicki, D. A. oth van der Horst, C. oth Fichtenbaum, C. J. oth Saag, M. S. oth Lynn, L. oth Hardy, D. oth Feinberg, J. oth in Quality of life research 1992 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 (DE-627)NLEJ188989161 (DE-600)2008960-0 1573-2649 nnns volume:6 year:1997 month:01 pages:0-0 extent:1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 6 1997 1 0-0 1 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ195672402 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS 1997 1 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Wu, A. W. oth Jacobson, D. L. oth Berzon, R. A. oth Revicki, D. A. oth van der Horst, C. oth Fichtenbaum, C. J. oth Saag, M. S. oth Lynn, L. oth Hardy, D. oth Feinberg, J. oth in Quality of life research 1992 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 (DE-627)NLEJ188989161 (DE-600)2008960-0 1573-2649 nnns volume:6 year:1997 month:01 pages:0-0 extent:1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 6 1997 1 0-0 1 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ195672402 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS 1997 1 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Wu, A. W. oth Jacobson, D. L. oth Berzon, R. A. oth Revicki, D. A. oth van der Horst, C. oth Fichtenbaum, C. J. oth Saag, M. S. oth Lynn, L. oth Hardy, D. oth Feinberg, J. oth in Quality of life research 1992 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 (DE-627)NLEJ188989161 (DE-600)2008960-0 1573-2649 nnns volume:6 year:1997 month:01 pages:0-0 extent:1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 6 1997 1 0-0 1 |
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(DE-627)NLEJ195672402 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb eng The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS 1997 1 nicht spezifiziert zzz rdacontent nicht spezifiziert z rdamedia nicht spezifiziert zu rdacarrier Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2002 Wu, A. W. oth Jacobson, D. L. oth Berzon, R. A. oth Revicki, D. A. oth van der Horst, C. oth Fichtenbaum, C. J. oth Saag, M. S. oth Lynn, L. oth Hardy, D. oth Feinberg, J. oth in Quality of life research 1992 6(1997) vom: Jan., Seite 0-0 (DE-627)NLEJ188989161 (DE-600)2008960-0 1573-2649 nnns volume:6 year:1997 month:01 pages:0-0 extent:1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE AR 6 1997 1 0-0 1 |
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the effect of mode of administration on medical outcomes study health ratings and euroqol scores in aids |
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The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS |
abstract |
Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. |
abstractGer |
Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. |
abstract_unstemmed |
Abstract Brief measures of health-related quality of life are being used with increased frequency in AIDS clinical trials. Self-administration of questionnaires can reduce costs in this setting because they require little time. However, the equivalence between self- and interview-administered responses in clinical trials is not known. We evaluated patient and proxy responses to the Medical Outcomes Study HIV Health Survey (MOS-HIV) and the EuroQol. We randomized 68 patients with advanced HIV disease on (1) mode of administration (self vs. interview); (2) type of interview (face-to-face vs. telephone); (3) questionnaire order (MOS-first vs. EuroQol-first); and (4) 2- vs. 3-item response categories for physical limitations. There were few differences in scores between self and interview administration and type of interview. Proxy respondents viewed patients as more impaired than did patients themselves on subjective aspects of health including mental health (63.8 vs. 75.7, p < 0.001), health distress (67.3 vs. 77.1, p=0.007), pain (64.4 vs. 70.0, p=0.04), and vitality (48.4 vs. 55.5, p=0.04). Results concerning questionnaire order and number of response categories were not conclusive. Our results suggest that for patients with advanced HIV disease, data from the MOS-HIV and the EuroQol collected using different modes may be pooled, but that proxy responses should be calibrated. |
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GBV_USEFLAG_U ZDB-1-SOJ GBV_NL_ARTICLE |
title_short |
The effect of mode of administration on Medical Outcomes Study health ratings and EuroQol scores in AIDS |
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1026471020698 |
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Wu, A. W. Jacobson, D. L. Berzon, R. A. Revicki, D. A. van der Horst, C. Fichtenbaum, C. J. Saag, M. S. Lynn, L. Hardy, D. Feinberg, J. |
author2Str |
Wu, A. W. Jacobson, D. L. Berzon, R. A. Revicki, D. A. van der Horst, C. Fichtenbaum, C. J. Saag, M. S. Lynn, L. Hardy, D. Feinberg, J. |
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7.39787 |