Identifying and Selecting Measures for Health Disparities Research - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 84
About This Presentation
Title:

Identifying and Selecting Measures for Health Disparities Research

Description:

Books that compile various measures and review their characteristics (e.g., McDowell and Newell) ... Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center. Resource ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:129
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 85
Provided by: ucsf4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Identifying and Selecting Measures for Health Disparities Research


1
Identifying and Selecting Measures for Health
Disparities Research
  • Anita L. Stewart, Ph.D.
  • University of California, San Francisco
  • Clinical Research with Diverse Communities
  • EPI 222, Spring
  • May 8, 2007

2
Organization of Class 5
  • How to select measures for your own studies of
    diverse populations
  • Measurement issues in research with diverse
    populations

3
Organization of Class 5
  • How to select measures for your own studies of
    diverse populations
  • Measurement issues in research with diverse
    populations

4
Selecting Measures for Your Own Study The Problem
  • You are beginning a study
  • You know the concepts (variables) of interest
  • Question Which measure of ________ should I
    use?
  • A popular measure
  • One that a colleague used successfully
  • Create your own

5
Inappropriate Measures can Result in
  • Conceptual inadequacy
  • Measuring wrong concept for your study
  • Poor data quality (e.g. missing data)
  • Poor variability
  • Poor reliability and validity
  • Inability to detect true associations
  • e.g., no measured change in outcome when change
    occurred

6
Two Types of Considerations in Selecting Measures
  • Contextual - factors unrelated to specific
    measurement tools
  • Characteristics of target population
  • Goals of research
  • Practical constraints
  • Psychometric - properties of measures in your
    context

7
Basic Steps in Selecting Appropriate Measures
  • 1. Specify context
  • 2. Define concept for your study
  • 3. Locate potential measures for consideration
  • 4. Review potential measures for
  • a) conceptual match to your definition
  • b) adequate psychometric properties in your
    target group
  • 5. Pretest potential measures in your target
    group
  • 6. Choose best ones based on pretest results OR
  • 7. Adapt if necessary to address problems

8
1. Specify Context
  • Research question and how concept fits
    research (outcome, predictor, covariate)
  • Nature of target population (health, age, SES,
    race/ethnicity, literacy)
  • Practical constraints (time, personnel, budget,
    respondent burden)

9
Step 2 Define Each Concept ForYour Study
  • Define each concept from your perspective, taking
    into account your..
  • study questions
  • target population
  • For outcomes
  • describe how the intervention or independent
    variables might affect it
  • describe specific types of changes you expect

10
Step 3. Locate Potential Measures
  • Identify candidate measures for all domains or
    concepts in your framework
  • For health outcomes
  • generic or condition-specific profiles of
    multiple domains OR measures of single domains
  • Redundancy OK for now
  • Do NOT develop your own questions unless it is
    absolutely necessary

11
Locating Measures
  • Compendia
  • Web
  • Organizations
  • National surveys
  • Large research studies
  • Many other sources

12
Locating Measures Compendia
  • Compendia of measures (reviewed)
  • Books that compile various measures and review
    their characteristics (e.g., McDowell and Newell)
  • Web sources of Compendia
  • HaPI-Health and Psychosocial Instruments

13
Locating Measures Organizations
  • RAND publishes measures, scoring manuals, and
    lists citations
  • Measures of quality of care, patient satisfaction
  • Measures of health-related quality of life
  • Generic and disease specific
  • All Medical Outcomes Study measures
  • www.rand.org/health/
  • Go to surveys and tools

14
Inter-University Consortium for Political and
Social Research
  • http//www.icpsr.umich.edu/
  • Maintains archive of social science data
  • Membership-based organization over 500 member
    colleges/universities
  • UCSF is a member
  • Can search website using keywords to locate
    studies, data, and questionnaires

15
MacArthur Research Network on Socioeconomic
Status and Health
  • Has measures in several domains
  • Psychosocial
  • Social and physical environment
  • Socioeconomic status (SES)
  • SES across the lifecourse
  • MacArthur Network on SES and Health
  • www.macses.ucsf.edu/research/overview.htm

16
Examples of Psychosocial Measures
  • Anxiety
  • Coping
  • Depression
  • Discrimination
  • Hostility
  • Optimism/pessimism
  • Personal control
  • Psychological stress
  • Purpose in life
  • Self-esteem
  • Social support
  • Vitality and vigor

http//www.macses.ucsf.edu/Research/wgps.htm
17
Examples of Environmental Measures
  • Individual level
  • Economic status
  • Occupation
  • Education
  • Sociodemographic characteristics
  • Neighborhood level
  • Residential segregation
  • Physical environment
  • Stress in environment
  • Availability of healthy foods

http//www.macses.ucsf.edu/Research/Social20Envi
ronment/chapters.html
18
Ottawa Health Research Institute Goals
  • Explore ways to help patients make "tough"
    healthcare decisions (multiple options, uncertain
    outcomes, benefits/harms that people value
    differently)
  • Measure and understand decision support needs of
    people and patients, particularly disadvantaged
    groups, and their providers
  • e.g., decisional conflict, decision
    self-efficacy, stages of decision making
  • www.decisionaid.ohra.ca/eval.html

19
Locating Measures National and State Surveys
  • National Center for Health Statistics
  • Surveys and data collection systems
  • NHIS, NHANES, HHANES, BRFSS, CHIS, MEPS
  • Entire surveys can be downloaded
  • Seldom includes measurement information

20
National Center for Health Statistics
  • National Health Interview Survey
  • National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey
  • National Health Care Survey
  • Ambulatory health care data (NAMCS)
  • National Home and Hospice Care Survey
  • National Survey of Family Growth
  • National Maternal and Infant Health Survey
  • Longitudinal Studies of Aging (LSOA)
  • www.cdc.gov/nchs/express.htm

21
Locating Measures National Agencies
  • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
  • National Quality Measures Clearinghouse
  • Consumer Assessment of Health Plans Survey
    (CAHPS)
  • National Healthcare Quality Report
  • National Healthcare Disparities Report

22
Locating Measures National Agencies
  • National Institutes of Health
  • NCI has a measurement initiative
  • Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS)
  • Working group compiled cancer screening
    questions, identified best ones, conducted
    extensive pretesting, cognitive interviewing
  • Measures are on the NCI web site

23
Locating Measures National Agencies
  • US Dept. of Veterans Affairs, National Center for
    PTSD
  • Has assessment section of web site
  • Variety of instruments to measure stress and
    trauma exposure
  • www.ncptsd.va.gov/ncmain/assessment/

24
Locating Measures Large Studies and Centers
  • Large research studies on similar topic
  • Health ABC, CARDIA, WHI, EPESE
  • Projects/Centers
  • Toolkit to measure end of life care (TIME)
  • Stanford Patient Education Research Center
  • Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center
  • Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research

25
Locating Measures Bibliographic Searches
  • Published measurement articles
  • Medline Searches
  • MESH headings or keywords
  • health status indicators
  • outcome assessment (health care)
  • psychometrics (methods)
  • questionnaires

26
Locating Measures Finding Authors of Measures
  • Published research using measure you are
    interested in
  • Unpublished measures often described in methods
  • Authors may provide measures

27
Step 4 Review Potential Measures for
  • Conceptual appropriateness relevance
  • in your study
  • in target group
  • Psychometric adequacy in target group or groups
  • Practicality
  • Acceptability
  • To respondents and interviewers

28
Conceptual Relevance
  • Example you are interested in reports of
    perceived discrimination in the health care
    setting
  • In reviewing measures of discrimination, most are
    about
  • Discrimination over the lifecourse
  • Discrimination in various life settings (work,
    school)
  • Not relevant for your purpose

29
Concept Depicted as a Measurement Model
  • Measurement model
  • the dimensional structure of a measure
  • how the items related to the construct
  • Can be depicted as a list or visually

30
Measurement Models
  • Physical Functioning (4 items)
  • Psychological Distress (7 items)

31
Measurement Model (List format)
  • Physical Functioning defined in terms of
  • Walking
  • Climbing stairs
  • Bending
  • Reaching

32
Measurement Model (Visual format)
Physical Functioning
Reaching
Climbing Stairs
Bending
Walking
33
Measurement Model (List format)
  • Psychological distress
  • Depression
  • Sad
  • Lost interest
  • Cant get going
  • Anxiety
  • Restless
  • Nervous

34
Measurement Model (Visual format)
Psychological Distress
Depression
Anxiety
Sad
Lost interest
Cant get going
Restless
Nervous
35
Psychometric Adequacy for Your Study
  • In samples similar to yours
  • good variability
  • low percent of missing data
  • good reliability
  • good validity
  • As an outcome for your planned intervention
  • responsive, sensitive to change in similar
    population
  • able to detect expected magnitude of change

36
Good Variability
  • All (or nearly all) scale levels are represented
  • Distribution approximates bell-shaped normal
  • No floor or ceiling effects
  • Scores bunched at either end

37
Reliability
  • Extent to which an observed score is free of
    random error
  • Population-specific reliability increases with
  • sample size
  • variability in scores (dispersion)
  • a persons level on the scale

38
Reliability Coefficient
  • Typically ranges from .00 - 1.00
  • Higher scores indicate better reliability
  • Types of reliability tests
  • Internal-consistency
  • Test-retest
  • Inter-rater
  • Intra-rater

39
Internal Consistency Reliability Cronbachs
Alpha
  • Requires multiple items measuring same construct
  • Extent to which items measure same construct
    (same latent variable)
  • It is a function of
  • Number of items
  • Average correlation among items
  • Variability in your sample

40
Minimum Standardsfor Internal Consistency
Reliability
  • For group comparisons (e.g., regression,
    correlational analyses)
  • .70 or above is minimum
  • .80 is optimal
  • above .90 is unnecessary
  • For individual assessment (e.g., treatment
    decisions)
  • .90 or above (.95) is preferred

JC Nunnally, Psychometric Theory, McGraw-Hill,
1994
41
Validity
  • Does a measure (or instrument) measure what it is
    supposed to measure?
  • AndDoes a measure NOT measure what it is NOT
    supposed to measure?

42
Validation of Measures is an Iterative, Lengthy
Process
  • Validity is not a property of the measure
  • validity is a property of a measure for
    particular purpose and sample
  • validation studies for one purpose and sample may
    not serve another purpose or sample
  • Accumulation of evidence
  • Different samples
  • Longitudinal designs

43
Three Major Forms of Measurement Validity
  • Content
  • Criterion
  • Construct

44
Construct Validity Basics
  • A process of answering the following questions
  • What is the hypothesis?
  • What are the results?
  • Do the results support (confirm) the hypothesis?

45
Construct Validity NOTE
  • Sometimes the hypothesis is that the measure will
    NOT be correlated with certain other measures, or
    will be less correlated with some than with
    others
  • THUS, observing a low or non-significant
    correlation can confirm construct validity

46
Limited Data on Psychometric Properties of Many
Measures
  • Not easy to find this information
  • Many studies do not report any psychometric
    properties
  • Assume the properties from original study carry
    over

47
Limited Data on Psychometric Properties of Many
Measures (cont.)
  • Especially in diverse populations
  • Few studies test measures across diverse groups
  • Even when diverse groups are included in research
  • sample sizes usually too small to conduct
    measurement studies by subgroups

48
Review Measures for Practicality
  • Method of administration appropriate for your
    study
  • Costs of administration within study resources
  • Scoring rules clearly documented
  • Measure available at cost you can afford
  • You are allowed to adapt it if necessary
  • Translations available if needed

49
Practical - Scoring
  • Know ahead of time how to score items
  • Count of correct answers? Summated scale?
    Weighted?
  • Are scoring instructions or computer scoring
    programs available?
  • Can scoring programs be purchased from
    developers?
  • Do you have a scoring codebook?

50
Review Measures for Availability of Translations
if Needed
  • If you need the questionnaire in another
    language, are there translations available?
  • Official (published and tested)
  • Unofficial (by some other researcher)
  • If not, you have to conduct translations
  • Use state-of-the-art methods

51
Review Measures for Acceptability
  • Acceptability to target population
  • respondent burden (length, time needed, distress)
  • culturally sensitive
  • Acceptability to interviewers
  • interviewer burden
  • amount of training needed

52
Respondent Burden
  • Diverse populations may have more difficulty with
    instruments, take longer to complete
  • Perceived burden
  • a function of item difficulty, distress due to
    content, perceived value of survey, expectations
    of length
  • as important as time burden

53
5. Pretest Potential Measures in Your Target
Population
  • Select best measures for all concepts in your
    conceptual framework
  • existing instrument in its entirety
  • subscales of relevant domains (e.g., only those
    that meet your needs)

54
Pretest
  • Pretesting essential for priority measures (e.g.,
    outcomes)
  • Pretest is to identify
  • problems with method of administration
  • unacceptable respondent burden
  • problems with questions or response choices
  • Hard to understand, complex, vague
  • words and phrases that do not mean what you
    intended to target population

55
Types of Pretests
  • General pretest, small (N10)
  • Cognitive interviewing (N5-10 each group)
  • Large pretest (N100)
  • test measurement properties prior to major study

56
Conduct Pretests in All Diverse Groups Being
Included in Your Study
  • Important to recruit people from each of your
    target populations
  • Wont learn anything if you just recruit friends,
    persons easy to recruit

57
Organization of Class 5
  • How to select measures for your own studies of
    diverse populations
  • Measurement issues in research with diverse
    populations

58
The Measurement Problem in Studies of Diverse
Populations
  • Measurement goal - identify measures that can be
    used across all diverse groups in your study, and
  • are sensitive to diversity
  • have minimal bias between groups
  • Most self-reported measures were developed and
    tested in mainstream, well-educated groups

59
Typical Sequence of Developing New Self-Report
Measures
Develop concept
Create item pool
Pretest/revise
Field survey
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
60
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
Pretest/revise
Field survey
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
61
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
.. to reflect these perspectives
Pretest/revise
Field survey
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
62
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
.. to reflect these perspectives
.. in all diverse groups
Pretest/revise
Field survey
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
63
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
.. to reflect these perspectives
.. in all diverse groups
Pretest/revise
Field survey
.. in all diverse groups
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
64
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
.. to reflect these perspectives
.. in all diverse groups
Pretest/revise
Field survey
.. in all diverse groups
Measurement studies across groups
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
65
Extra Steps in Sequence of Developing New
Self-Report Measures for Diverse Groups
Obtain perspectives of diverse groups
Develop concept
Create item pool
.. to reflect these perspectives
.. in all diverse groups
Pretest/revise
Field survey
.. in all diverse groups
If results are non-equivalent
Psychometric analyses
Final measures
66
Measurement Adequacy vs. Measurement Equivalence
  • Making group comparisons requires conceptual and
    psychometric adequacy and equivalence
  • Adequacy - within a diverse group
  • concepts are appropriate
  • psychometric properties meet minimal criteria
  • Equivalence - between diverse groups
  • conceptual and psychometric properties are
    comparable

67
Conceptual and Psychometric Adequacy and
Equivalence
Conceptual
Concept equivalent across groups
Concept meaningful within one group
Adequacyin 1 Group
Equivalence Across Groups
Psychometric properties meet minimal
standards within one group
Psychometric properties invariant
(equivalent) across groups
Psychometric
68
Conceptual Adequacy in One Group
Conceptual
Concept equivalent across groups
Concept meaningful within one group
Adequacyin 1 Group
Equivalence Across Groups
Psychometric properties meet minimal
standards within one group
Psychometric properties invariant
(equivalent) across groups
Psychometric
69
Conceptual Adequacy in One Group
  • Is concept relevant, meaningful, and acceptable
    in that group?
  • Traditional research
  • Conceptual adequacy simply defining a concept
  • Mainstream population assumed
  • Minority and health disparities research
  • Mainstream concepts may be inadequate
  • Concept should correspond to how a particular
    group thinks about it

70
Example of Inadequate Concept
  • Patient satisfaction typically conceptualized in
    mainstream populations in terms of, e.g.,
  • access, technical care, communication,
    continuity, interpersonal style
  • In minority and low income groups, additional
    relevant domains include, e.g.,
  • discrimination by health professionals
  • sensitivity to language barriers

71
Psychometric Adequacy in One Group
Conceptual
Concept equivalent across groups
Concept meaningful within one group
Adequacyin 1 Group
Equivalence Across Groups
Psychometric properties meet minimal
standards within one group
Psychometric properties invariant
(equivalent) across groups
Psychometric
72
Psychometric Adequacy in a Single Diverse Group
  • Measures meet minimal psychometric criteria in
    (new) group
  • Measures have similar measurement properties in
    diverse group as in original mainstream groups on
    which the measures were developed

73
Psychometric Adequacy in any Group
  • Minimal standards within a group
  • Sufficient variability
  • Minimal missing data
  • Adequate reliability/reproducibility
  • Evidence of construct validity
  • Evidence of responsiveness to change
  • Basic classical test theory approach

74
Why Not Use Culture-Specific Measures?
  • Measurement goal is to identify measures that can
    be used across all groups, yet maintain
    sensitivity to diversity and have minimal bias
  • Most health disparities studies require comparing
    mean scores across diverse groups
  • need comparable measures

75
Group Comparisons Are the Most Problematic
  • Disparities studies involve comparing mean levels
    of health or determinants
  • Requires conceptual and psychometric equivalence,
    or s
  • potential true differences may be obscured
  • observed group differences may be inaccurate

76
Issues Concerning Group Comparisons
  • Observed mean differences across groups in a
    measure can be due to
  • culturally- or group-mediated differences in true
    score (true differences) -- OR --
  • bias - systematic differences between group
    observed scores not attributable to true scores

77
Conceptual Equivalence Across Groups
Conceptual
Concept equivalent across groups
Concept meaningful within one group
Adequacyin 1 Group
Equivalence Across Groups
Psychometric properties meet minimal
standards within one group
Psychometric properties invariant
(equivalent) across groups
Psychometric
78
Conceptual Equivalence
  • Is the concept relevant, familiar, acceptable to
    all diverse groups being studied?
  • Is the concept defined the same way in all
    groups?
  • all relevant domains included (none missing)
  • interpreted similarly
  • Is the concept appropriate for all diverse groups?

79
Bias - A Special Concern
  • Measurement bias in any one group may make group
    comparisons invalid
  • Bias can be due to group differences in
  • meaning of concepts or items
  • extent to which measures represent a concept
  • cognitive processes of responding
  • use of response scales
  • appropriateness of data collection methods

80
Effects of Bias on Depression Example in Chinese
Respondents
  • Three sources of bias tend to lower observed
    score
  • tendency not to express negative feelings
  • meaning of word depression in Chinese is more
    severe than for Whites
  • Comparing groups assume true level of
    depression is the same in both groups
  • Observed scores lower in Chinese group due to
    these biases

81
Example of Effect of Biased Items
  • 5 CES-D items administered to Black and White men
  • 1 item subject to differential item functioning
    (bias)
  • 5-item scale including item suggested that Black
    men had higher levels of somatic symptoms than
    White men (p lt .01)
  • 4-item scale excluding biased item showed no
    differences between Black and white men

S Gregorich, Med Care, 200644S78-S94.
82
Summary
  • Selecting best measures is critical to validity
    of research
  • Very little published information on measurement
    properties in diverse groups
  • Raises issues of conceptual and psychometric
    adequacy and equivalence
  • Pretesting is the most important thing you can do

83
Summary (cont)
  • Methods described here are ideal
  • Impractical for most researchers
  • Apply these methods to your most important
    measures
  • e.g., outcomes, key independent variables
  • Keep learning
  • Good, appropriate measures remain the foundation
    of excellent research

84
Want More?
  • Epi 225 Measurement in Clinical Research
  • Fall 2007
  • Thursday 330-5 China Basin
  • See handout
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com