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Class 5 Additional Psychometric Characteristics: Validity and Bias, Responsiveness, Sensitivity to Change October 22, 2009. Anita L. Stewart Institute for Health & Aging University of California, San Francisco. Overview . Types of validity in health assessment Focus on construct validity
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Class 5Additional Psychometric Characteristics: Validity and Bias, Responsiveness, Sensitivity to Change October 22, 2009 Anita L. Stewart Institute for Health & Aging University of California, San Francisco
Overview • Types of validity in health assessment • Focus on construct validity • How bias affects validity • Socially desirable responding and culture as sources of bias • Sensitivity to change
Validity • Does a measure (or instrument) measure what it is supposed to measure? • And…Does a measure NOT measure what it is NOT supposed to measure?
Valid Scale? No! • There is no such thing as a “valid” scale • We accumulate “evidence” of validity in a variety of populations in which it has been tested • Similar to reliability
Validation of Measures is an Iterative, Lengthy Process • Accumulation of evidence • Different samples • Longitudinal designs
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Content Validity: • Relevant when writing items • Extent to which a set of items represents the defined concept
Relevance of Content Validity to Selecting Measures • “Conceptual adequacy” • Does “candidate” measure represent adequately the concept YOU are intending to measure
Content Validity Appropriate at Two Levels • Battery or Are all relevant domainsinstrument represented in an instrument? • Measure Are all aspects of a defined concept represented in the items of a scale?
Example of Content Validity of Instrument • You are studying health-related quality of life (HRQL) in clinical depression • Your HRQL concept includes sleep problems, ability to work, and social functioning • SF-36 - a candidate • Missing sleep problems
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Criterion Validity • How well a measure correlates with another measure considered to be an accepted standard (criterion) • Can be • Concurrent • Predictive
Criterion Validity of Self-reported Health Care Utilization • Compare self-report with “objective” data (computer records of utilization) • # MD visits past 6 months (self-report) correlated .64 with computer records • # hospitalizations past 6 months (self-report) correlated .74 with computer records Ritter PL et al, J Clin Epid, 2001;54:136-141
Criterion Validity of Screening Measure • Develop depression screening tool to identify persons likely to have disorder • Do clinical assessment only on those who screen “likely” • Criterion validity • Extent to which the screening tool detects (predicts) those with disorder • sensitivity and specificity, ROC curves
Criterion Validity of Measure to Predict Outcome • If goal is to predict health or other outcome • Extent to which the measure predicts the outcome • Example: Develop self-reported war-related stress measure to identify vets at risk of PTSD • How well does it predict subsequent PTSD (Vogt et al., 2004, readings)
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Construct Validity Basics • Does measure relate to other measures in hypothesized ways? • Do measures “behave as expected”? • 3-step process • State hypothesis: direction and magnitude • Calculate correlations • Do results confirm hypothesis?
Source of Hypotheses in Construct Validity • Prior literature in which associations between constructs have been observed • e.g., other samples, with other measures of constructs you are testing • Theory, that specifies how constructs should be related • Clinical experience
Who Tests for Validity? • When measure is being developed, investigators should test construct validity • As measure is applied, results of other studies provide information that can be used as evidence of construct validity
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Convergent Validity • Hypotheses stated as expected direction and magnitude of correlations • “We expect X measure of depression to be positively and moderately correlated with two measures of psychosocial problems” • The higher the depression, the higher the level of problems on both measures
Testing Validity of Expectations Regarding Aging Measure • Hypothesis 1: ERA-38 total score would correlate moderately with ADLS, PCS, MCS, depression, comorbidity, and age • Hypothesis 2: Functional independence scale would show strongest associations with ADLs, PCS, and comorbidity Sarkisian CA et al. Gerontologist. 2002;42:534
Testing Validity of Expectations Regarding Aging Measure • Hypothesis 1: ERA-38 total score would correlate moderately with ADLS, PCS, MCS, depression, comorbidity, and age (convergent) • Hypothesis 2: Functional independence scale would show strongest associations with ADLs, PCS, and comorbidity Sarkisian CA et al. Gerontologist. 2002;42:534
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Discriminant Validity: Known Groups • Does the measure distinguish between groups known to differ in concept being measured? • Tests for mean differences between groups
Example of a Known Groups Validity Hypothesis • Among three groups: • General population • Patients visiting providers • Patients in a public health clinic • Hypothesis: scores on functioning and well-being measures will be the best in a general population and the worst in patients in a public health clinic
Mean Scores on MOS 20-item Short Form in Three Groups Public General MOS health populationpatientspatients Physical function 91 78 50 Role function 88 78 39 Mental health 78 73 59 Health perceptions 74 63 41 Bindman AB et al., Med Care 1990;28:1142
PedsQL Known Groups Validity • Hypothesis: PedsQL scores would be lower in children with a chronic health condition than without JW Varni et al. PedsQL™ 4.0: Reliability and Validity of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ …, Med Care, 2001;39:800-812.
Types of Measurement Validity • Content • Criterion • Construct • Convergent • Discriminant • Convergent/discriminant All can be: Concurrent Predictive
Convergent/Discriminant Validity • Does measure correlate lower with measures it is not expected to be related to … than to measures it is expected to be related to? • The extent to which the pattern of correlations conforms to hypothesis is confirmation of construct validity
Basis for Convergent/Discriminant Hypotheses • All measures of health will correlate to some extent • Hypothesis is of relative magnitude
Example of Convergent/Discriminant Validity Hypothesis • Expected pattern of relationships: • A measure of physical functioning is “hypothesized” to be more highly related to a measure of mobility than to a measure of depression
Example of Convergent/Discriminant Validity Evidence Pearson correlation: Mobility Depression Physical functioning .57 .25
Testing Validity of Expectations Regarding Aging Measure • Hypothesis 1: ERA-38 total score would correlate moderately with ADLS, PCS, MCS, depression, comorbidity, and age (convergent) • Hypothesis 2: Functional independence scale would show strongest associations with ADLs, PCS, and comorbidity (convergent/discriminant) Sarkisian CA et al. Gerontologist. 2002;42:534
ERA-38 Convergent/Discriminant Validity Results: Hypothesis 2
Construct Validity Thoughts: Lee Sechrest • There is no point at which construct validity is established • It can only be established incrementally • Our attempts to measure constructs help us better understand and revise these constructs Sechrest L, Health Serv Res, 2005;40(5 part II), 1596
Construct Validity Thoughts: Lee Sechrest (cont) • “An impression of construct validity emerges from examining a variety of empirical results that together make a compelling case for the assertion of construct validity”
Construct Validity Thoughts: Lee Sechrest (cont) • Because of the wide range of constructs in the social sciences, many of which cannot be exactly defined.. • …once measures are developed and in use, we must continue efforts to understand them and their relationships to other measured variables.
Interpreting Validity Coefficients • Magnitude and conformity to hypothesis are important, not statistical significance • Nunnally: rarely exceed .30 to .40 which may be adequate (1994, p. 99) • McDowell and Newell: typically between 0.40 and 0.60 (1996, p. 36) • Max correlation between 2 measures = square root of product of reliabilities • 2 scales with .70 reliabilities, max correlation .70 • Correlation of .60 would be “high”
Overview • Types of validity in health assessment • Focus on construct validity • How bias affects validity • Socially desirable responding and culture as sources of bias • Sensitivity to change
Components of an Individual’s Observed Item Score (from Class 3) Observed true item score score random systematic error = +
Random versus Systematic Error Observed true item score score Relevant to reliability random systematic error = + Relevant to validity
Bias is Systematic Error • Affects validity of scores • If scores contain systematic error, cannot know the “true” mean score • Will obtain an observed score that is either systematically higher or lower than the “true” score
“Bias” or “Systematic Error”? • Bias implies that the direction of error known • Systematic error – direction neutral • Same error applies to entire sample
Sources of “Systematic Error” in Observed Scores of Individuals • Respondent • Socially desirable responding • Acquiescent response bias • Cultural beliefs (e.g., not reporting distress) • Halo affects • Observer • Belief that respondent is ill • Instrument
Socially Desirable Responding • Tendency to respond in socially desirable ways to present oneself favorably • Observed score is consistently lower or higher than true score in the direction of a more socially acceptable score
Socially Desirable Response Set – Looking “good” • After coming up with an answer to a question, respondent “screens” the answer • “Will this answer make the person like me less?” • May “edit” their answer • Systematic underreporting of “risk” behavior example • A woman has 2 drinks of alcohol a day, but responds that she drinks a few times a week