Cargando…

Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact

Validity is not an inherent property of a measurement scale and so evidence for validity relating to its use for particular purposes, with defined populations and in specified contexts must be accumulated. We have published the development of a web-based, generic health-related quality of life instr...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Scott, E. Marian, Davies, Vinny, Nolan, Andrea M., Noble, Cory E., Dowgray, Nathalie J., German, Alexander J., Wiseman-Orr, M. Lesley, Reid, Jacqueline
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8514988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34660769
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.733812
_version_ 1784583518839373824
author Scott, E. Marian
Davies, Vinny
Nolan, Andrea M.
Noble, Cory E.
Dowgray, Nathalie J.
German, Alexander J.
Wiseman-Orr, M. Lesley
Reid, Jacqueline
author_facet Scott, E. Marian
Davies, Vinny
Nolan, Andrea M.
Noble, Cory E.
Dowgray, Nathalie J.
German, Alexander J.
Wiseman-Orr, M. Lesley
Reid, Jacqueline
author_sort Scott, E. Marian
collection PubMed
description Validity is not an inherent property of a measurement scale and so evidence for validity relating to its use for particular purposes, with defined populations and in specified contexts must be accumulated. We have published the development of a web-based, generic health-related quality of life instrument (VetMetrica™) to measure the affective impact of chronic disease in cats and provided evidence for its validity in a mixed population of cats, some of which, according to veterinary judgement, were healthy and others of which were suffering from chronic conditions likely to affect their quality of life, often with multiple co-morbidities present. The first aim of the current study was to demonstrate the construct validity of the VetMetrica™ generic instrument when used with cats suffering from osteoarthritis, by testing the hypothesis that the health-related quality of life profile of cats with different severities of osteoarthritis would differ and by demonstrating convergent validity between the health-related quality of life profile scores and independently quantified vet-assessed pain and quality of life impact scores. The latter involved simple correlation analysis and investigation of the relationship between health-related quality of life domain scores and vet-assessed scores, when adjusted for other potential explanatory variables including number of comorbidities and age. Responsiveness—the ability to detect clinically relevant change—is an essential quality for an evaluative instrument and it also provides evidence for “longitudinal validity”. Therefore, a second aim of this study was to demonstrate that changes in health-related quality of life domain scores concurred with the clinician's impression of change over time in the health status of cats with osteoarthritis, thus providing evidence for the instrument's responsiveness. Previously, we have reported disagreement between owner and vet impression as to health status in cats in general, but not in relation to any specific disease. Accordingly, the third study aim was to investigate the extent of agreement or disagreement between owner impression of the impact of osteoarthritis on their cats' quality of life and vet impression of such impact. Fifty one percentage of cat owners believed their cats to be perfectly healthy despite a clinician diagnosis of osteoarthritis
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8514988
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85149882021-10-15 Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact Scott, E. Marian Davies, Vinny Nolan, Andrea M. Noble, Cory E. Dowgray, Nathalie J. German, Alexander J. Wiseman-Orr, M. Lesley Reid, Jacqueline Front Vet Sci Veterinary Science Validity is not an inherent property of a measurement scale and so evidence for validity relating to its use for particular purposes, with defined populations and in specified contexts must be accumulated. We have published the development of a web-based, generic health-related quality of life instrument (VetMetrica™) to measure the affective impact of chronic disease in cats and provided evidence for its validity in a mixed population of cats, some of which, according to veterinary judgement, were healthy and others of which were suffering from chronic conditions likely to affect their quality of life, often with multiple co-morbidities present. The first aim of the current study was to demonstrate the construct validity of the VetMetrica™ generic instrument when used with cats suffering from osteoarthritis, by testing the hypothesis that the health-related quality of life profile of cats with different severities of osteoarthritis would differ and by demonstrating convergent validity between the health-related quality of life profile scores and independently quantified vet-assessed pain and quality of life impact scores. The latter involved simple correlation analysis and investigation of the relationship between health-related quality of life domain scores and vet-assessed scores, when adjusted for other potential explanatory variables including number of comorbidities and age. Responsiveness—the ability to detect clinically relevant change—is an essential quality for an evaluative instrument and it also provides evidence for “longitudinal validity”. Therefore, a second aim of this study was to demonstrate that changes in health-related quality of life domain scores concurred with the clinician's impression of change over time in the health status of cats with osteoarthritis, thus providing evidence for the instrument's responsiveness. Previously, we have reported disagreement between owner and vet impression as to health status in cats in general, but not in relation to any specific disease. Accordingly, the third study aim was to investigate the extent of agreement or disagreement between owner impression of the impact of osteoarthritis on their cats' quality of life and vet impression of such impact. Fifty one percentage of cat owners believed their cats to be perfectly healthy despite a clinician diagnosis of osteoarthritis Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8514988/ /pubmed/34660769 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.733812 Text en Copyright © 2021 Scott, Davies, Nolan, Noble, Dowgray, German, Wiseman-Orr and Reid. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Veterinary Science
Scott, E. Marian
Davies, Vinny
Nolan, Andrea M.
Noble, Cory E.
Dowgray, Nathalie J.
German, Alexander J.
Wiseman-Orr, M. Lesley
Reid, Jacqueline
Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title_full Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title_fullStr Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title_full_unstemmed Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title_short Validity and Responsiveness of the Generic Health-Related Quality of Life Instrument (VetMetrica™) in Cats With Osteoarthritis. Comparison of Vet and Owner Impressions of Quality of Life Impact
title_sort validity and responsiveness of the generic health-related quality of life instrument (vetmetrica™) in cats with osteoarthritis. comparison of vet and owner impressions of quality of life impact
topic Veterinary Science
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8514988/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34660769
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2021.733812
work_keys_str_mv AT scottemarian validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT daviesvinny validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT nolanandream validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT noblecorye validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT dowgraynathaliej validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT germanalexanderj validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT wisemanorrmlesley validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact
AT reidjacqueline validityandresponsivenessofthegenerichealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumentvetmetricaincatswithosteoarthritiscomparisonofvetandownerimpressionsofqualityoflifeimpact