Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework

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Standard

Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework. / Ventegodt, Søren; Hilden, Jørgen; Merrick, Joav.

In: Scientific World Journal, Vol. 3, 2003, p. 950-61.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ventegodt, S, Hilden, J & Merrick, J 2003, 'Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework', Scientific World Journal, vol. 3, pp. 950-61. https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.75

APA

Ventegodt, S., Hilden, J., & Merrick, J. (2003). Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework. Scientific World Journal, 3, 950-61. https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.75

Vancouver

Ventegodt S, Hilden J, Merrick J. Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework. Scientific World Journal. 2003;3:950-61. https://doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2003.75

Author

Ventegodt, Søren ; Hilden, Jørgen ; Merrick, Joav. / Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework. In: Scientific World Journal. 2003 ; Vol. 3. pp. 950-61.

Bibtex

@article{1cdf86e09d4c11debc73000ea68e967b,
title = "Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework",
abstract = "Despite the widespread acceptance of quality of life (QOL) as the ideal guideline in healthcare and clinical research, serious conceptual and methodological problems continue to plague this area. In an attempt to remedy this situation, we propose seven criteria that a quality-of-life concept must meet to provide a sound basis for investigation by questionnaire. The seven criteria or desiderata are: (1) an explicit definition of quality of life; (2) a coherent philosophy of human life from which the definition is derived; (3) a theory that operationalizes the philosophy by specifying unambiguous, nonoverlapping, and jointly exhaustive questionnaire items; (4) response alternatives that permit a fraction-scale interpretation; (5) technical checks of reproducibility; (6) meaningfulness to investigators, respondents, and users; and (7) an overall aesthetic appeal of the questionnaire. These criteria have guided the design of a validated 5-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (QOL5), and a validated 317-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (SEQOL), administered to a well-documented birth cohort of 7,400 Danes born in 1959-1961, as well as to a reference sample of 2,500 Danes. Presented in outline, the underlying integrative quality-of-life (IQOL) theory is a meta-theory. To illustrate the seven criteria at work, we show the extent to which they are satisfied by one of the eight component theories. Next, two sample results of our investigation are presented: satisfaction with one's sex life has the expected covariation with one's quality of life, and so does mother's smoking during pregnancy, albeit to a much smaller extent. It is concluded that the methodological framework presented has proved helpful in designing a questionnaire that is capable of yielding acceptably valid and reliable measurements of global and generic quality of life.",
author = "S{\o}ren Ventegodt and J{\o}rgen Hilden and Joav Merrick",
note = "Keywords: Humans; Quality of Life; Research Design",
year = "2003",
doi = "10.1100/tsw.2003.75",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "950--61",
journal = "The Scientific World Journal",
issn = "2356-6140",
publisher = "Hindawi Publishing Corporation",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Measurement of quality of life I. A methodological framework

AU - Ventegodt, Søren

AU - Hilden, Jørgen

AU - Merrick, Joav

N1 - Keywords: Humans; Quality of Life; Research Design

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Despite the widespread acceptance of quality of life (QOL) as the ideal guideline in healthcare and clinical research, serious conceptual and methodological problems continue to plague this area. In an attempt to remedy this situation, we propose seven criteria that a quality-of-life concept must meet to provide a sound basis for investigation by questionnaire. The seven criteria or desiderata are: (1) an explicit definition of quality of life; (2) a coherent philosophy of human life from which the definition is derived; (3) a theory that operationalizes the philosophy by specifying unambiguous, nonoverlapping, and jointly exhaustive questionnaire items; (4) response alternatives that permit a fraction-scale interpretation; (5) technical checks of reproducibility; (6) meaningfulness to investigators, respondents, and users; and (7) an overall aesthetic appeal of the questionnaire. These criteria have guided the design of a validated 5-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (QOL5), and a validated 317-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (SEQOL), administered to a well-documented birth cohort of 7,400 Danes born in 1959-1961, as well as to a reference sample of 2,500 Danes. Presented in outline, the underlying integrative quality-of-life (IQOL) theory is a meta-theory. To illustrate the seven criteria at work, we show the extent to which they are satisfied by one of the eight component theories. Next, two sample results of our investigation are presented: satisfaction with one's sex life has the expected covariation with one's quality of life, and so does mother's smoking during pregnancy, albeit to a much smaller extent. It is concluded that the methodological framework presented has proved helpful in designing a questionnaire that is capable of yielding acceptably valid and reliable measurements of global and generic quality of life.

AB - Despite the widespread acceptance of quality of life (QOL) as the ideal guideline in healthcare and clinical research, serious conceptual and methodological problems continue to plague this area. In an attempt to remedy this situation, we propose seven criteria that a quality-of-life concept must meet to provide a sound basis for investigation by questionnaire. The seven criteria or desiderata are: (1) an explicit definition of quality of life; (2) a coherent philosophy of human life from which the definition is derived; (3) a theory that operationalizes the philosophy by specifying unambiguous, nonoverlapping, and jointly exhaustive questionnaire items; (4) response alternatives that permit a fraction-scale interpretation; (5) technical checks of reproducibility; (6) meaningfulness to investigators, respondents, and users; and (7) an overall aesthetic appeal of the questionnaire. These criteria have guided the design of a validated 5-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (QOL5), and a validated 317-item generic, global quality-of-life questionnaire (SEQOL), administered to a well-documented birth cohort of 7,400 Danes born in 1959-1961, as well as to a reference sample of 2,500 Danes. Presented in outline, the underlying integrative quality-of-life (IQOL) theory is a meta-theory. To illustrate the seven criteria at work, we show the extent to which they are satisfied by one of the eight component theories. Next, two sample results of our investigation are presented: satisfaction with one's sex life has the expected covariation with one's quality of life, and so does mother's smoking during pregnancy, albeit to a much smaller extent. It is concluded that the methodological framework presented has proved helpful in designing a questionnaire that is capable of yielding acceptably valid and reliable measurements of global and generic quality of life.

U2 - 10.1100/tsw.2003.75

DO - 10.1100/tsw.2003.75

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 14570986

VL - 3

SP - 950

EP - 961

JO - The Scientific World Journal

JF - The Scientific World Journal

SN - 2356-6140

ER -

ID: 14309492