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Exploring older people’s understanding of the QOL-ACC, a new preference-based quality-of-life measure, for quality assessment and economic evaluation in aged care: the impact of cognitive impairment and dementia

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posted on 2024-10-08, 02:45 authored by K Lay, Matthew CrockerMatthew Crocker, L Engel, J Ratcliffe, R Milte, C Hutchinson
Abstract Background Quality-of-life is an essential outcome for quality assessment and economic evaluation in health and social care. The-Quality-of-Life – Aged Care Consumers (QOL-ACC) is a new preference-based quality-of-life measure, psychometrically validated with older people in aged care. More evidence is needed to inform the self-report reliability of the QOL-ACC in older people with varying levels of cognitive impairment and dementia. Methods A think-aloud protocol was developed and applied with older residents. The Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) was applied to assign participants to no cognitive impairment (NCI - MMSE score ≥ 27) and cognitive impairment (MMCI - MMSE score < 27) subgroups. Three independent raters utilised a Tourangeau survey response model-based framework to identify response issues. Data were compared across cognition subgroups and synthesized using a ‘traffic light’ grading to classify frequency and type of response issues. Gradings were utilised to assess self-report reliability according to different levels of cognitive impairment. Results Qualitative data from 44 participants (NCI = 20, MMCI = 24) were included for analysis. Response issues were more evident in the cognitive impairment subgroup than the no cognitive impairment subgroup. All participants who received a ‘red’ grade had an MMSE score of < 20 and 66% of ‘amber’ grades occurred in the cognitive impairment subgroup. Conclusions The QOL-ACC is able to be completed reliably by older residents with an MMSE score > 17. Future research is needed to assess the generalisability of these findings to other preference-based quality of life instruments and for older people in other care settings including health systems.

History

Journal

Health and Quality of Life Outcomes

Volume

22

Article number

4

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1477-7525

eISSN

1477-7525

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

BMC