The Patient Activation Measure-13 (PAM-13) in an oncology patient population: psychometric properties and dimensionality evaluation.

IF 3.2 2区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Inka Roesel, Daniela Froehlich, Stefanie Joos, Jan Valentini, Holger Mauch, Peter Martus
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Accurate assessment and enhancement of health-related skills among oncology patients are pivotal for optimizing cancer care. The Patient Activation Measure (PAM-13), a questionnaire designed to reflect an individual's knowledge, skills, and confidence in self-healthcare management, has been validated across diverse countries and settings. Concerns have been raised regarding the cross-situational applicability, as patients with specific diseases and cultural backgrounds interpret questionnaire items differently. This study aimed to examine the structural validity and psychometric properties of the PAM-13 in an oncological patient cohort.

Methods: Baseline data from a longitudinal non-randomized controlled study involving cancer out-patients (n = 1,125) from Comprehensive Cancer Centres in Southern Germany were analysed. The German version of the PAM-13 was employed. With classical test and item response theory methods data quality, reliability, convergent and structural validity, as well as psychometric properties were assessed. Exploratory (EFA) and confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) were employed to investigate the postulated unidimensionality of the underlying construct. With a partial credit model (PCM) we examined item fit, targeting, local independence and differential item functioning.

Results: Participants were predominantly female (73.0%) with a breast cancer diagnosis (41.3%). While items were generally well-accepted, ceiling effects were observed and a high mean PAM-13 score (69.7, SD = 14.2) was noted, potentially compromising responsiveness to interventions. Reliability was adequate (Cronbach's α = 0.81), person and item separation reliability were good to excellent (0.81 and 0.99, respectively). Explorations of the unidimensionality of the construct (EFA, CFA, PCM) yielded inconclusive results, hinting towards a two-factor solution. Item difficulty rankings deviated from the original. No differential item functioning was identified, and local independence was confirmed.

Conclusions: While the PAM-13 serves as a valuable instrument for comprehending and promoting health-related skills in cancer patients, the identification of ceiling effects, disordered item-difficulty rankings, and inconclusive findings regarding unidimensionality contribute to the expanding body of evidence, emphasizing the dependency of PAM-13's validity and reliability on distinctive characteristics within the population under investigation. Future research should prioritize refining or adding PAM-13 items to better capture the specific health-related challenges within diverse populations, paving the way for more effective patient engagement strategies in oncology.

Trial registration number: DRKS00021779.

肿瘤患者群体中的患者激活测量-13(PAM-13):心理测量特性和维度评估。
背景:准确评估和提高肿瘤患者的健康相关技能对于优化癌症护理至关重要。患者激活测量(PAM-13)是一份旨在反映个人在自我保健管理方面的知识、技能和信心的问卷,已在不同国家和环境中得到验证。由于特定疾病和文化背景的患者对问卷项目有不同的理解,因此有人对其跨环境适用性表示担忧。本研究旨在研究 PAM-13 在肿瘤患者队列中的结构效度和心理测量特性:方法:分析了一项纵向非随机对照研究的基线数据,该研究涉及德国南部综合癌症中心的癌症门诊患者(n = 1,125)。采用的是 PAM-13 的德语版本。采用经典测试和项目反应理论方法对数据质量、可靠性、收敛性和结构效度以及心理测量特性进行了评估。采用探索性因子分析(EFA)和确认性因子分析(CFA)来研究基本结构的假设单维性。通过部分信用模型(PCM),我们考察了项目拟合度、目标定位、局部独立性和差异项目功能:参与者主要为女性(73.0%),其中 41.3% 被诊断为乳腺癌。虽然项目的接受度普遍较高,但也观察到了天花板效应,PAM-13 的平均得分较高(69.7,SD = 14.2),可能会影响对干预措施的反应能力。信度是适当的(克朗巴赫α = 0.81),人与项目分离的信度为良好至优秀(分别为 0.81 和 0.99)。对结构单维性的探索(EFA、CFA、PCM)没有得出结论,暗示了双因素解决方案。项目难度排名偏离了原来的排名。没有发现不同的项目功能,局部独立性得到了证实:虽然 PAM-13 是理解和促进癌症患者健康相关技能的重要工具,但天花板效应、项目难度排名紊乱以及单维度方面的不确定结果的发现,有助于不断扩大证据库,强调 PAM-13 的有效性和可靠性取决于调查人群的独特特征。未来的研究应优先考虑完善或增加 PAM-13 项目,以更好地捕捉不同人群中与健康相关的具体挑战,为肿瘤学领域更有效的患者参与策略铺平道路:DRKS00021779.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.30
自引率
2.80%
发文量
154
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes is an open access, peer-reviewed, journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes considers original manuscripts on the Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) assessment for evaluation of medical and psychosocial interventions. It also considers approaches and studies on psychometric properties of HRQOL and patient reported outcome measures, including cultural validation of instruments if they provide information about the impact of interventions. The journal publishes study protocols and reviews summarising the present state of knowledge concerning a particular aspect of HRQOL and patient reported outcome measures. Reviews should generally follow systematic review methodology. Comments on articles and letters to the editor are welcome.
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