reviewHealth Technology AssessmentFeb 1, 2009DIAMOND OA

Improving the evaluation of therapeutic interventions in multiple sclerosis: the role of new psychometric methods

Peninsula College of Medicine and Dentistry

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Objectives

In this monograph we examine the added value of new psychometric methods (Rasch measurement and Item Response Theory) over traditional psychometric approaches by comparing and contrasting their psychometric evaluations of existing sets of rating scale data. We have concentrated on Rasch measurement rather than Item Response Theory because we believe that it is the more advantageous method for health measurement from a conceptual, theoretical and practical perspective. Our intention is to provide an authoritative document that describes the principles of Rasch measurement and the practice of Rasch analysis in a clear, detailed, non-technical form that is accurate and accessible to clinicians and researchers in health measurement. REVIEW METHODS: A comparison was undertaken of traditional and new psychometric methods in five large sets of rating scale data: (1) evaluation of the Rivermead Mobility Index (RMI) in data from 666 participants in the Cannabis in Multiple Sclerosis (CAMS) study; (2) evaluation of the Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale (MSIS-29) in data from 1725 people with multiple sclerosis; (3) evaluation of test-retest reliability of MSIS-29 in data from 150 people with multiple sclerosis; (4) examination of the use of Rasch analysis to equate scales purporting to measure the same health construct in 585 people with multiple sclerosis; and (5) comparison of relative responsiveness of the Barthel Index and Functional Independence Measure in data from 1400 people undergoing neurorehabilitation.

Results

Both Rasch measurement and Item Response Theory are conceptually and theoretically superior to traditional psychometric methods. Findings from each of the five studies show that Rasch analysis is empirically superior to traditional psychometric methods for evaluating rating scales, developing rating scales, analysing rating scale data, understanding and measuring stability and change, and understanding the health constructs we seek to quantify.

Citation impact

617
total citations
FWCI
13.04
Percentile
100%
References
240
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Rasch model
  • Classical test theory
  • Item response theory
  • Psychometrics
  • Differential item functioning
  • Rating scale
  • Psychology
  • Reliability (semiconductor)
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Funding