Using postal questionnaires to evaluate physical activity and diet behaviour change: case study exploring implications of valid responder characteristics in interpreting intervention outcomes.


Autoria(s): Cole, Judith A.; Gillespie, Paddy; Smith, Susan M.; Byrne, Molly; Murphy, Andrew W.; Cupples, Margaret E.
Data(s)

15/10/2014

Resumo

Background: Patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) are used to evaluate lifestyle interventions but littleis known about differences between patients returning valid and invalid responses, or of potential for bias inevaluations. We aimed to examine the characteristics of patients who returned valid responses to lifestylequestionnaires compared to those whose responses were invalid for evaluating lifestyle change. <br/>Methods: We conducted a secondary data analysis from the SPHERE Study, a trial of an intervention to improveoutcomes for patients with coronary heart disease in primary care. Postal questionnaires were used to assessphysical activity (Godin) and diet (DINE) among study participants at baseline and 18 month follow-up. Three binaryresponse variables were generated for analysis: (1) valid Godin score; (2) valid DINE Fibre score; and (3) validDINE Total Fat score. Multivariate analysis comprised generalised estimating equation regression to examine theassociation of patients’ characteristics with their return of valid responses at both timepoints. <br/>Results: Overall, 92.1% of participants (832/903) returned questionnaires at both baseline and 18 months. Relativelyfewer valid Godin scores were returned by those who left school aged <15 years (36.5%) than aged 18 and over(50.5%), manual workers (39.5%) than non-manual (49.5%) and those with an elevated cholesterol (>5 mmol)(34.7%) than those with a lower cholesterol (44.4%) but multivariate analysis identified that only school leaving age(p = 0.047) was of statistical significance.Relatively fewer valid DINE scores were returned by manual than non-manual workers (fibre: 80.8% v 86.8%;fat: 71.2% v 80.0%), smokers (fibre: 72.6% v 84.7%; fat: 67.5% v 76.9%), patients with diabetes (fibre: 75.9% v 82.9%;fat: 66.9% v 75.8%) and those with cholesterol >5 mmol (fat: 68.2% v 76.2%) but multivariate analysis showedstatistical significance only for smoking (fibre: p = 0.013; fat: p = 0.045), diabetes (fibre: p = 0.039; fat: p = 0.047), andcholesterol (fat: p = 0.039). <br/>Conclusions: Our findings illustrate the importance of detailed reporting of research methods, with clearinformation about response rates, respondents and valid outcome data. Outcome measures which are relevant to astudy population should be chosen carefully. The impact of methods of outcome measurement and valid responserates in evaluating healthcare requires further study.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/using-postal-questionnaires-to-evaluate-physical-activity-and-diet-behaviour-change-case-study-exploring-implications-of-valid-responder-characteristics-in-interpreting-intervention-outcomes(309a0d14-169d-47c4-879c-0acad520057b).html

http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1186/1756-0500-7-725

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/15588520/1756_0500_7_725.pdf

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Cole , J A , Gillespie , P , Smith , S M , Byrne , M , Murphy , A W & Cupples , M E 2014 , ' Using postal questionnaires to evaluate physical activity and diet behaviour change: case study exploring implications of valid responder characteristics in interpreting intervention outcomes. ' BMC Research Notes , vol 7 , no. 725 . DOI: doi:10.1186/1756-0500-7-725

Palavras-Chave #questionnaires #Physical activity #diet #postal
Tipo

article