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Weights for Scoring the Quality of Well-Being Instrument among Rheumatoid Arthritics: A Comparison to General Population Weights

The importance of measuring health outcomes such as functional status and quality of life has increased with the greater emphasis on efficiency and on judgements of clinical effectiveness of therapies for patients with chronic disease. One measure of health status, the quality of well-being (QWB), h...

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Published in:Medical care 1986-11, Vol.24 (11), p.973-980
Main Authors: Balaban, Donald J., Sagi, Philip C., Goldfarb, Neil I., Nettler, Steven
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Language:English
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container_issue 11
container_start_page 973
container_title Medical care
container_volume 24
creator Balaban, Donald J.
Sagi, Philip C.
Goldfarb, Neil I.
Nettler, Steven
description The importance of measuring health outcomes such as functional status and quality of life has increased with the greater emphasis on efficiency and on judgements of clinical effectiveness of therapies for patients with chronic disease. One measure of health status, the quality of well-being (QWB), has received significant attention as a health policy model because it quantifies health on a scale ranging from "zero" (death) to "one" (optimal health). The scale is based on weights (values) that were derived by having several thousand individuals in the general population rate scenarios in which a patient is described in terms of mobility, physical activity, social activity, and major symptom or problem. The present study was undertaken to determine if a disease-specific population composed of patients with moderate and moderately severe rheumatoid arthritis who were participating in a national multicenter trial of a new oral therapeutic agent, would rank scenarios similarly to the general population sample. In this study, close agreement was found between the weights obtained from the general population sample and the weights obtained from the sample of rheumatoid arthritic patients (R = 0.937). The investigators believe that the study supports the use of the original general population weights and suggest that the index may be used for populations with a specific condition as well as for general populations.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/00005650-198611000-00001
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection
subjects Activities of Daily Living
Adult
Age groups
Aged
Arthritis
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - drug therapy
Arthritis, Rheumatoid - rehabilitation
Chronic diseases
Diagnostic indices
Exercise
Female
Health care outcome assessment
Health outcomes
Health status
Health Status Indicators
Health Surveys
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Male
Middle Aged
Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care) - methods
Population
Rheumatoid arthritis
Statistics as Topic
Wellbeing
title Weights for Scoring the Quality of Well-Being Instrument among Rheumatoid Arthritics: A Comparison to General Population Weights
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