Summary

This document discusses core principles in mental health research, focusing on measurement selection and psychometric considerations. It covers topics such as questionnaire design, responsiveness, precision, and cross-cultural validity for various research methods.

Full Transcript

**[Core Principles in Mental Health Research:]** **[4a: Measurements & Scales]** [Learning Objectives:] - To review the core principles of measurement selection, with a focus on practical and psychometric considerations. - To practically apply principles of questionnaire design and p...

**[Core Principles in Mental Health Research:]** **[4a: Measurements & Scales]** [Learning Objectives:] - To review the core principles of measurement selection, with a focus on practical and psychometric considerations. - To practically apply principles of questionnaire design and psychometric properties and outline a plan for how these would be tested - To understand some of the challenges in conducting research, including outcome measurement in a culturally diverse population [Will the questionnaire pick changes over time and differences between groups?] - Responsiveness: does the questionnaire pick up changes over time sufficiently well? - May be defined in relation to stakeholder views: is a difference agreed by patients and/or clinicians as important detected by the instrument? - Or there are ways of calculating from statistical distribution e.g. statistical definitions e.g. standardised response mean calculated from average pre-/post difference and standard deviation - Responsiveness is often included alongside reliability and validity as one of core psychometric properties in recent checklists of essential psychometric properties (e.g. COMET checklist) - What's important to clinicians/patients?? Gap usual [Does the questionnaire produce a useful range of scores?] - Precision: Do scores vary sufficiently among respondents for measurements to be useful? - Floor and ceiling effects: Where many people score at the upper or lower end of a scale so results are not useful - Could be a problem with the scale or use in an inappropriate population e.g. a scale to measure symptoms among people with severe mental health problems used in general population - Above are sometimes subsumed within definition of responsiveness -- some variations between lists of core psychometric properties - May have to remove certain items and retest to determine reliability and validity [Is the questionnaire appropriate for the study in which it is being used?] - Appropriateness is generally study-specific rather than a property of questionnaires. - Is this an appropriate tool for the study question? - E.g. Does what's measured map exactly onto the study research question? - Is it designed for/suitable for this population? - E.g. a measure of resilience developed and piloted with undergraduates may not be suitable for people with severe mental health problems -- new pilot study often needed [Is it going to be practical to use this tool? ] - Feasibility: can you use the tool in the proper way in practice. Impediments (generally study/situation specific) might include: - Lack of time or a lengthy tool - Lack of access to training or of money to pay for an expensive tool - Not having researchers who have the required training to use the tool - Some tools have charges -- must consider when planning a study (free versions online might not have scoring) [Is the questionnaire acceptable to the people we plan to use it with?] - Acceptability is very important. Reasons for an instrument being unacceptable (which can change over time) include: - People find it rude or stigmatising - Language is hard to comprehend, or seems irrelevant - Tone is pessimistic or distressing - It looks off-putting, is glitchy, long or hard to use - Response rate or partial completion is an indicator - Another reason why piloting/stakeholder consultation is essential, even for previously used instruments [Cross-cultural validity *(sometimes defined as a component of construct validity)*] - Cross-cultural validity: defined as measurement invariance -- a scale performs the same way across cultures - May aim for this or for instruments developed for or adapted to specific groups - Either way -- should be confident instrument is valid among people you use it with - Can be challenging in highly diverse contexts e.g. London [Cross-cultural validation and instrument translation] - Processes required to produce a valid version of an instrument in another culture/language include: - Translation and back-translation - Exploring whether language/items have same meaning, often through qualitative work (e.g., idioms, colloquialisms) - Exploring whether important aspects of the concept being measure are being covered - Investigating psychometric properties (reliability, validity, responsiveness), piloting [Conducting valid research in a diverse environment] - Concepts of cross-cultural validity can be challenging in a diverse contemporary environment e.g., where many people's identities are complex and mixed, not straightforwardly part of a specific culture - An apparently cross-culturally valid instrument could miss important aspects of minorities' experiences e.g., impacts of racism -- measuring the same concepts in everyone may not always be right - When developing and testing measures: study samples should in any case be diverse and representative of local populations [Some important challenges to conducting research that is relevant for people from Black and Minority Ethnic backgrounds (an introduction)] - Small minority of mental health academics/researchers are from BAME backgrounds (we hope some of you will help remedy this!) (1%!!!) - Study samples tend to under-recruit people from minorities whose mental health appears impacted by injustice and inequality - Measures and study methods may not reflect important aspects of minority experience e.g. impacts of racism and discrimination - Questions that are important from a BAME perspective are not addressed: e.g. Very limited research on why people from Black backgrounds in UK are much more likely to be admitted to hospital compulsorily, even though this has been demonstrated again and again........

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser