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Development of a Social Functioning Assessment Using Computerized Adaptive Testing for Patients With Stroke
Authors:Shih-Chieh Lee  Yi-Jing Huang  Gong-Hong Lin  Yeh-Tai Chou  Chia-Yeh Chou  Ching-Lin Hsieh
Affiliation:1. School of Occupational Therapy, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan;2. Department of Psychology, National Chung Cheng University, Chiayi, Taiwan;3. Research Center for Psychological and Educational Testing, National Taiwan Normal University, Taipei, Taiwan;4. Department of Occupational Therapy, College of Medicine, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taipei, Taiwan;5. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, National Taiwan University Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan;6. Department of Occupational Therapy, College of Medical and Health Science, Asia University, Taiwan
Abstract:

Objective

To develop a computerized adaptive test of social functioning (Social-CAT) for patients with stroke.

Design

This study contained 2 phases. First, a unidimensional item bank was formed using social-related items with sufficient item fit (ie, infit and outfit mean square [MNSQ]). The social-related items were selected from 3 commonly used patient-reported quality-of-life measures. Items with differential item functioning (DIF) of sex were deleted. Second, we performed simulations to determine the best set of stopping rules with both high reliability and efficiency. The participants' responses to the items were extracted from a previous study.

Setting

Rehabilitation wards and departments of rehabilitation/neurology of 5 general hospitals.

Participants

Patients (N=263) with stroke (47.1% were inpatients).

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measure

Social-CAT.

Results

The unidimensionality of the 24 selected items was supported (infit and outfit MNSQs =0.8–1.2). One item had DIF of sex and was deleted. The item bank was composed of the remaining 23 items. With the best set of stopping rules (person reliability ≥.90 or limited reliability increased ≤.001), the Social-CAT used on average 10 items to achieve sufficient reliability (average person reliability =.88; 81.0% of the patients with reliability ≥.90).

Conclusions

The Social-CAT appears to be a unidimensional measure with acceptable reliability and efficiency, and it could be useful for both clinicians and patients in time-pressed clinical settings.
Keywords:Cerebrovascular disorders  Interpersonal relations  Quality of life  Rehabilitation  Social participation  CAT  computerized adaptive testing  DIF  differential item functioning  HRQOL  health-related quality of life  LRI  limited reliability increase  MNSQ  mean square  SIS  Stroke Impact Scale  Social-CAT  computerized adaptive testing of social functioning  SSQOL  Stroke-Specific Quality of Life Scale  WHOQOL-BREF  World Health Organization Quality of Life–Brief Version
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