Internal consistency and validity of the Stroke Impact Scale 2.0 (SIS 2.0) and SIS-16 in an Australian sample

被引:68
作者
Edwards, B [1 ]
O'Connell, B [1 ]
机构
[1] Cabrini Hosp, Nursing Professorial Unit, Malvern, Vic 3144, Australia
关键词
internal consistency; outcome; SIS-16; Stroke Impact Scale;
D O I
10.1023/A:1026109920478
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and Purpose: The impact of stroke is multidimensional however standard stroke measures do not discriminate well when stroke patients are less physically impaired. The Stroke Impact Scale 2.0 (SIS 2.0) is a multidimensional measure of the impact of stroke but its' psychometric properties require further testing. The SIS-16 is a measure of physical functioning designed to be more sensitive to differences in physical functioning than current stroke outcome measures but there is only preliminary information detailing its' reliability and validity. The current study examined the internal consistency and validity of the SIS 2.0 and SIS-16 in an Australian sample of stroke patients. Methods: The SIS 2.0, SIS-16, World Health Organization Bref-Scale (WHOQOL-BREF) and Zung's Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS) were completed by 74 stroke patients in rural Victoria, Australia. Results: The item convergent validity index indicated good item convergence of the SIS-16 and SIS 2.0 domains. The item discriminant validity index had only adequate divergence for most SIS 2.0 domains. Internal consistencies of the SIS-16 and SIS 2.0 domains were acceptable (alpha = 0.87-0.95). Correlations between the SIS-16 and SIS 2.0 and the WHOQOL-BREF and SDS supported the convergent and discriminant validity of the SIS-16 and all the dimensions of the SIS 2.0 except 'Participation' which lacked discriminant validity. Conclusions: The SIS 2.0 and SIS-16 had good psychometric properties with support for the internal consistency and validity of both measures.
引用
收藏
页码:1127 / 1135
页数:9
相关论文
共 21 条
[11]   Performance of the Norwegian SF-36 Health Survey in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. II. A comparison of the SF-36 with disease-specific measures [J].
Kvien, TK ;
Kaasa, S ;
Smedstad, LM .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1998, 51 (11) :1077-1086
[12]  
Nunnally JC., 1978, PSYCHOMETRIC THEORY, V2nd ed
[13]  
OCONNELL B, 2001, STROKE SURVIVORS HLT
[14]   Testing and validation of the German version of the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) [J].
Petersen, C ;
Morfeld, M ;
Bullinger, M .
FORTSCHRITTE DER NEUROLOGIE PSYCHIATRIE, 2001, 69 (06) :284-+
[15]   A patient-centred study of the consequences of stroke [J].
Pound, P ;
Gompertz, P ;
Ebrahim, S .
CLINICAL REHABILITATION, 1998, 12 (04) :338-347
[16]   The World Health Organization Quality of Life assessment (WHOQOL): Development and general psychometric properties [J].
Power, M ;
Kuyken, W ;
Orley, J ;
Herrman, H ;
Schofield, H ;
Murphy, B ;
Metelko, Z ;
Szabo, S ;
Pibernik-Okanovic, M ;
Quemada, N ;
Caria, A ;
Rajkumar, S ;
Kumar, S ;
Saxena, S ;
Chandiramani, K ;
Amir, M ;
Bar-On, D ;
Tazaki, M ;
Noji, A ;
van Heck, G ;
De Vries, J ;
Sucre, JA ;
Picard-Ami, L ;
Kabanov, M ;
Lomachenkov, A ;
Burkovsky, G ;
Carrasco, RL ;
Bodharamik, Y ;
Meesapya, K ;
Skevington, S ;
Patrick, D ;
Martin, M ;
Wild, D ;
Acuda, W ;
Mutambirwa, J ;
Bullinger, M ;
Harper, A ;
Sartorius, N .
SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE, 1998, 46 (12) :1569-1585
[17]  
Stuart AL, 1992, MEASURING FUNCTIONIN, P375
[18]   Methods for testing data quality, scaling assumptions, and reliability: The IQOLA project approach [J].
Ware, JE ;
Gandek, B .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1998, 51 (11) :945-952
[19]  
World Health Organization, 1999, ANN BIBL WHO QUAL LI
[20]  
Wright B.D., 1982, Rating scale analysis: Rasch measurement