Assessment of Health-Related Quality of Life after TBI: Comparison of a Disease-Specific (QOLIBRI) with a Generic (SF-36) Instrument

  • Nicole von Steinbuechel
  • Amra Covic
  • Suzanne Polinder
  • Thomas Kohlmann
  • Ugne Cepulyte
  • Herbert Poinstingl
  • Joy Backhaus
  • Wilbert Bakx
  • Monika Bullinger
  • Anne-Lise Christensen
  • Rita Formisano
  • Henning Gibbons
  • Stefan Höfer
  • Sanna Koskinen
  • Andrew Maas
  • Edmund Neugebauer
  • Jane Powell
  • Jaana Sarajuuri
  • Nadine Sasse
  • Silke Schmidt
  • Holger Mühlan
  • Klaus von Wild
  • George Zitnay
  • Jean-Luc Truelle

Abstract

Psychosocial, emotional, and physical problems can emerge after traumatic brain injury (TBI), potentially impacting health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Until now, however, neither the discriminatory power of disease-specific (QOLIBRI) and generic (SF-36) HRQoL nor their correlates have been compared in detail. These aspects as well as some psychometric item characteristics were studied in a sample of 795 TBI survivors. The Shannon H (') index absolute informativity, as an indicator of an instrument's power to differentiate between individuals within a specific group or health state, was investigated. Psychometric performance of the two instruments was predominantly good, generally higher, and more homogenous for the QOLIBRI than for the SF-36 subscales. Notably, the SF-36 "Role Physical," "Role Emotional," and "Social Functioning" subscales showed less satisfactory discriminatory power than all other dimensions or the sum scores of both instruments. The absolute informativity of disease-specific as well as generic HRQoL instruments concerning the different groups defined by different correlates differed significantly. When the focus is on how a certain subscale or sum score differentiates between individuals in one specific dimension/health state, the QOLIBRI can be recommended as the preferable instrument.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0953-4180
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2016
PubMed 27022207