Abstract

Objective: This article outlines basic methods for quantifying reproducibility and responsiveness of evaluative outcome measures. Methods: The background noise in stable patients provides the desired information to quantify the reproducibility. From this, the smallest real difference (SRD) for longitudinal differences can be derived. We propose to use the SRD to define responsiveness: from all patients who change according to an external criterion, we take the percentage that changes at least SRD on the outcome measure. A more complete picture of the responsiveness of the outcome measure arises when the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) is constructed, corresponding to all possible cut-off change scores. The proposed methods are illustrated with an empirical example. Results: In the illustration the methods appeared to be very useful and complemented each other. We could evaluate whether the observed change score was larger than that expected due to chance. With the methods it was possible to evaluate both the ability of an instrument to detect change if there is a real change in health status (sensitivity to change) and the ability to detect absence of change if there is no real change (specificity to change). Conclusion: We presented the use of SRDs and ROC curves for quantifying reproducibility and responsiveness. We started with the basic notions and arrived at methods that are both understandable and useful.

Keywords

ReproducibilityReceiver operating characteristicOutcome (game theory)Measure (data warehouse)Noise (video)StatisticsComputer scienceMedicinePsychologyData miningArtificial intelligenceMathematics

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Measuring Health-Related Quality of Life

Clinicians and policymakers are recognizing the importance of measuring health-related quality of life (HRQL) to inform patient management and policy decisions. Self- or intervi...

1993 Annals of Internal Medicine 3924 citations

Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
17
Issue
4
Pages
479-487
Citations
163
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

163
OpenAlex

Cite This

Henrica C. W. de Vet, L.M. Bouter, P.D. Bezemer et al. (2001). REPRODUCIBILITY AND RESPONSIVENESS OF EVALUATIVE OUTCOME MEASURES. International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care , 17 (4) , 479-487. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0266462301107038

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/s0266462301107038