Abstract
Methods and major findings
A prospective, international study was used to construct a stable CIVIQ scale and to validate its psychometric properties.
An iterative process was implemented to eliminate the more unstable items (six), and the social and physical dimensions were
combined. The resulting instrument comprised 14 items, split into three dimensions (pain, physical, and psychological), and
was named CIVIQ-14. The stability of the CIVIQ-14 factorial structure was confirmed in Polish, Czech, Spanish, and French
populations using principal component analysis and multitrait/multimethod analysis. Psychometric assessment demonstrated that
CIVIQ-14 was reliable (intra-class coefficient >0.8; weighted kappa >0.8), valid (correlation coefficients between dimension
scores and clinical severity scores between 0.3 and 0.6), and sensitive (effect sizes >0.6 for psychological dimension; >0.8
for the other dimensions).
An iterative process was implemented to eliminate the more unstable items (six), and the social and physical dimensions were
combined. The resulting instrument comprised 14 items, split into three dimensions (pain, physical, and psychological), and
was named CIVIQ-14. The stability of the CIVIQ-14 factorial structure was confirmed in Polish, Czech, Spanish, and French
populations using principal component analysis and multitrait/multimethod analysis. Psychometric assessment demonstrated that
CIVIQ-14 was reliable (intra-class coefficient >0.8; weighted kappa >0.8), valid (correlation coefficients between dimension
scores and clinical severity scores between 0.3 and 0.6), and sensitive (effect sizes >0.6 for psychological dimension; >0.8
for the other dimensions).
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-8
- DOI 10.1007/s11136-011-0008-3
- Authors
- R. Launois, REES, 28 rue d’Assas, 75006 Paris, France
- J. G. Le Moine, REES, 28 rue d’Assas, 75006 Paris, France
- F. S. Lozano, Vascular Surgery Unit, University Hospital of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain
- A. Mansilha, Department of Vascular Surgery, Oporto Medical School, Hospital S. Joao, Porto, Portugal
- Journal Quality of Life Research
- Online ISSN 1573-2649
- Print ISSN 0962-9343