Abstract

This study estimated the validity and relative precision (RP) of four methods (MOS long- and short-form scales, global items, and COOP Poster Charts) in measuring six general health concepts. The authors also tested whether and how precisely each method discriminated relatively well adult patients (N = 638) from those with only severe chronic medical (N = 168) and only psychiatric conditions (N = 163), as clinically defined. For comparisons between the well group and both medical and psychiatric groups, RP estimates favored long-form over short-form, multi-item scales, and favored multi-item scales over single-item global measures and poster charts. In relation to long forms, short-form multi-item scales achieved a median RP of .93; RP estimates for global items and poster charts were .81 and .67, respectively. Variations in RP across methods and concepts were linked to differences in the coarseness of measurement scales, reliability, and content (including the effects of chart illustrations). These variations in RP have implications for the interpretation of scores, the statistical power of comparisons between clinical groups, and the size of confidence intervals around individual patient scores.

Keywords

Reliability (semiconductor)StatisticsChartScale (ratio)Short FormsConfidence intervalPsychologyMathematicsMedicineClinical psychologyPower (physics)GeographyCartography

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1992
Type
article
Volume
30
Issue
Supplement
Pages
MS253-MS265
Citations
739
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

739
OpenAlex

Cite This

Collen A. McHorney, John E. Ware, William H. Rogers et al. (1992). The Validity and Relative Precision of MOS Short-, and Long- Form Health Status Scales and Dartmouth COOP Charts. Medical Care , 30 (Supplement) , MS253-MS265. https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199205001-00025

Identifiers

DOI
10.1097/00005650-199205001-00025