Valued Outcomes in the Cancer Experience (VOICE)(TM): Development and validation of a multidimensional measure of perceived control
Version 2 2024-06-19, 16:12Version 2 2024-06-19, 16:12
Version 1 2023-02-12, 23:01Version 1 2023-02-12, 23:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 16:12authored byAlexandra K Zaleta, Erica E Fortune, Melissa F Miller, Eva YuenEva Yuen, Shauna McManus, Karen Hurley, Mitch Golant, Sara Goldberger, Lillie D Shockney, Joanne S Buzaglo
Abstract
Objective
Enhancing cancer patients’ sense of control can positively impact psychological well-being. We developed and assessed the psychometric properties of Valued Outcomes in the Cancer Experience (VOICE)TM, a measure of patients’ perceived control over key personal priorities within their cancer experience.
Methods
VOICE construction and testing were completed in three phases with separate participant samples: (1) item generation and initial item pool testing (N = 459), (2) scale refinement (N = 623), and (3) confirmatory validation (N = 515).
Results
A 21-item measure was developed that captures cancer patients’ sense of control in seven key domains: (1) Purpose and Meaning, (2) Functional Capacity, (3) Longevity, (4) Quality Care, (5) Illness Knowledge, (6) Social Support, and (7) Financial Capability. VOICE demonstrated adequate internal consistency (full-scale α = 0.93; factor α = 0.67–0.89) and adequate to strong convergent and discriminatory validity.
Significance of results
VOICE measures cancer patients’ perceived control across a diverse range of personal priorities, creating a platform for elevating patient perspectives and identifying pathways to enhance patient well-being. VOICE is positioned to guide understanding of the patient experience and aid the development and evaluation of supportive care interventions to enhance well-being.