Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases. / Nexo, Mette A.; Watt, Torquil; Bonnema, Steen Joop; Hegedüs, Laszlo; Rasmussen, Åse Krogh; Feldt-Rasmussen, Ulla; Bjørner, Jakob.

In: Quality of Life Research, 19.12.2014.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nexo, MA, Watt, T, Bonnema, SJ, Hegedüs, L, Rasmussen, ÅK, Feldt-Rasmussen, U & Bjørner, J 2014, 'Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases', Quality of Life Research. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0

APA

Nexo, M. A., Watt, T., Bonnema, S. J., Hegedüs, L., Rasmussen, Å. K., Feldt-Rasmussen, U., & Bjørner, J. (2014). Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases. Quality of Life Research. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0

Vancouver

Nexo MA, Watt T, Bonnema SJ, Hegedüs L, Rasmussen ÅK, Feldt-Rasmussen U et al. Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases. Quality of Life Research. 2014 Dec 19. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0

Author

Nexo, Mette A. ; Watt, Torquil ; Bonnema, Steen Joop ; Hegedüs, Laszlo ; Rasmussen, Åse Krogh ; Feldt-Rasmussen, Ulla ; Bjørner, Jakob. / Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases. In: Quality of Life Research. 2014.

Bibtex

@article{56394559ef0e40bd875c56c844d44fa8,
title = "Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases",
abstract = "PURPOSE: We aimed to identify the best approach to work ability assessment in patients with thyroid disease by evaluating the factor structure, measurement equivalence, known-groups validity, and predictive validity of a broad set of work ability items.METHODS: Based on the literature and interviews with thyroid patients, 24 work ability items were selected from previous questionnaires, revised, or developed anew. Items were tested among 632 patients with thyroid disease (non-toxic goiter, toxic nodular goiter, Graves' disease (with or without orbitopathy), autoimmune hypothyroidism, and other thyroid diseases), 391 of which had participated in a study 5 years previously. Responses to select items were compared to general population data. We used confirmatory factor analyses for categorical data, logistic regression analyses and tests of differential item function, and head-to-head comparisons of relative validity in distinguishing known groups.RESULTS: Although all work ability items loaded on a common factor, the optimal factor solution included five factors: role physical, role emotional, thyroid-specific limitations, work limitations (without disease attribution), and work performance. The scale on thyroid-specific limitations showed the most power in distinguishing clinical groups and time since diagnosis. A global single item proved useful for comparisons with the general population, and a thyroid-specific item predicted labor market exclusion within the next 5 years (OR 5.0, 95 % CI 2.7-9.1).CONCLUSIONS: Items on work limitations with attribution to thyroid disease were most effective in detecting impact on work ability and showed good predictive validity. Generic work ability items remain useful for general population comparisons.",
author = "Nexo, {Mette A.} and Torquil Watt and Bonnema, {Steen Joop} and Laszlo Heged{\"u}s and Rasmussen, {{\AA}se Krogh} and Ulla Feldt-Rasmussen and Jakob Bj{\o}rner",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
day = "19",
doi = "10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0",
language = "English",
journal = "Quality of Life Research",
issn = "0962-9343",
publisher = "Springer",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Thyroid-specific questions on work ability showed known-groups validity among Danes with thyroid diseases

AU - Nexo, Mette A.

AU - Watt, Torquil

AU - Bonnema, Steen Joop

AU - Hegedüs, Laszlo

AU - Rasmussen, Åse Krogh

AU - Feldt-Rasmussen, Ulla

AU - Bjørner, Jakob

PY - 2014/12/19

Y1 - 2014/12/19

N2 - PURPOSE: We aimed to identify the best approach to work ability assessment in patients with thyroid disease by evaluating the factor structure, measurement equivalence, known-groups validity, and predictive validity of a broad set of work ability items.METHODS: Based on the literature and interviews with thyroid patients, 24 work ability items were selected from previous questionnaires, revised, or developed anew. Items were tested among 632 patients with thyroid disease (non-toxic goiter, toxic nodular goiter, Graves' disease (with or without orbitopathy), autoimmune hypothyroidism, and other thyroid diseases), 391 of which had participated in a study 5 years previously. Responses to select items were compared to general population data. We used confirmatory factor analyses for categorical data, logistic regression analyses and tests of differential item function, and head-to-head comparisons of relative validity in distinguishing known groups.RESULTS: Although all work ability items loaded on a common factor, the optimal factor solution included five factors: role physical, role emotional, thyroid-specific limitations, work limitations (without disease attribution), and work performance. The scale on thyroid-specific limitations showed the most power in distinguishing clinical groups and time since diagnosis. A global single item proved useful for comparisons with the general population, and a thyroid-specific item predicted labor market exclusion within the next 5 years (OR 5.0, 95 % CI 2.7-9.1).CONCLUSIONS: Items on work limitations with attribution to thyroid disease were most effective in detecting impact on work ability and showed good predictive validity. Generic work ability items remain useful for general population comparisons.

AB - PURPOSE: We aimed to identify the best approach to work ability assessment in patients with thyroid disease by evaluating the factor structure, measurement equivalence, known-groups validity, and predictive validity of a broad set of work ability items.METHODS: Based on the literature and interviews with thyroid patients, 24 work ability items were selected from previous questionnaires, revised, or developed anew. Items were tested among 632 patients with thyroid disease (non-toxic goiter, toxic nodular goiter, Graves' disease (with or without orbitopathy), autoimmune hypothyroidism, and other thyroid diseases), 391 of which had participated in a study 5 years previously. Responses to select items were compared to general population data. We used confirmatory factor analyses for categorical data, logistic regression analyses and tests of differential item function, and head-to-head comparisons of relative validity in distinguishing known groups.RESULTS: Although all work ability items loaded on a common factor, the optimal factor solution included five factors: role physical, role emotional, thyroid-specific limitations, work limitations (without disease attribution), and work performance. The scale on thyroid-specific limitations showed the most power in distinguishing clinical groups and time since diagnosis. A global single item proved useful for comparisons with the general population, and a thyroid-specific item predicted labor market exclusion within the next 5 years (OR 5.0, 95 % CI 2.7-9.1).CONCLUSIONS: Items on work limitations with attribution to thyroid disease were most effective in detecting impact on work ability and showed good predictive validity. Generic work ability items remain useful for general population comparisons.

U2 - 10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0

DO - 10.1007/s11136-014-0896-0

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25522977

JO - Quality of Life Research

JF - Quality of Life Research

SN - 0962-9343

ER -

ID: 136795655