Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population

Abstract Background Well-adapted and validated quality-of-life measurement models for the nursing home population are scarce. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the psychometrical properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire among cognitively intact nursing home residents. The research ques...

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Main Authors: Gørill Haugan, Jorunn Drageset, Beate André, Kamile Kukulu, James Mugisha, Britt Karin S. Utvær
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1245-3
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spelling doaj-1c4b424c58fc4ad9a232efc01c58f9f22021-01-03T12:08:27ZengBMCHealth and Quality of Life Outcomes1477-75252020-01-0118111410.1186/s12955-019-1245-3Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home populationGørill Haugan0Jorunn Drageset1Beate André2Kamile Kukulu3James Mugisha4Britt Karin S. Utvær5NTNU Center for health promotion research, Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyFaculty of Health and Social Science, Western University of Applied ScienceNTNU Center for health promotion research, Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyFaculty of Nursing, Akdeniz UniversitySocial Worker, Kyambogo University and Butabika National Referral and Teaching HospitalDepartment of Teacher Education, Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyAbstract Background Well-adapted and validated quality-of-life measurement models for the nursing home population are scarce. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the psychometrical properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire among cognitively intact nursing home residents. The research question addressed evidence related to the dimensionality, reliability and construct validity, all of which considered interrelated measurement properties. Methods Cross-sectional data were collected during 2017–2018, in 27 nursing homes representing four different Norwegian municipalities, located in Western and Mid-Norway. The total sample comprised 188 of 204 (92% response rate) long-term nursing home residents who met the inclusion criteria: (1) municipality authority’s decision of long-term nursing home care; (2) residential time 3 months or longer; (3) informed consent competency recognized by responsible doctor and nurse; and (4) capable of being interviewed. Results Principal component analysis and confirmative factor analyses indicated a unidimensional solution. Five of the original 13 items showed low reliability and validity; excluding these items revealed a good model fit for the one-dimensional 8-items measurement model, showing good internal consistency and validity for these 8 items. Conclusion Five out of the 13 original items were not high-quality indicators of quality-of-life showing low reliability and validity in this nursing home population. Significant factor loadings, goodness-of-fit indices and significant correlations in the expected directions with the selected constructs (anxiety, depression, self-transcendence, meaning-in-life, nurse-patient interaction, and joy-of-life) supported the psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire. Exploring the essence of quality-of-life when residing in a nursing home is highly warranted, followed by development and validation of new tools assessing quality-of-life in this population. Such knowledge and well-adapted scales for the nursing home population are beneficial and important for the further development of care quality in nursing homes, and consequently for quality-of-life and wellbeing in this population.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1245-3Factor analysisNursing home residentsNursing home careOPQoL-brief questionnairePsychometric propertiesQuality of life
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gørill Haugan
Jorunn Drageset
Beate André
Kamile Kukulu
James Mugisha
Britt Karin S. Utvær
spellingShingle Gørill Haugan
Jorunn Drageset
Beate André
Kamile Kukulu
James Mugisha
Britt Karin S. Utvær
Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Factor analysis
Nursing home residents
Nursing home care
OPQoL-brief questionnaire
Psychometric properties
Quality of life
author_facet Gørill Haugan
Jorunn Drageset
Beate André
Kamile Kukulu
James Mugisha
Britt Karin S. Utvær
author_sort Gørill Haugan
title Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
title_short Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
title_full Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
title_fullStr Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
title_full_unstemmed Assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
title_sort assessing quality of life in older adults: psychometric properties of the opqol-brief questionnaire in a nursing home population
publisher BMC
series Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
issn 1477-7525
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Abstract Background Well-adapted and validated quality-of-life measurement models for the nursing home population are scarce. Therefore, the aim of this study was to test the psychometrical properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire among cognitively intact nursing home residents. The research question addressed evidence related to the dimensionality, reliability and construct validity, all of which considered interrelated measurement properties. Methods Cross-sectional data were collected during 2017–2018, in 27 nursing homes representing four different Norwegian municipalities, located in Western and Mid-Norway. The total sample comprised 188 of 204 (92% response rate) long-term nursing home residents who met the inclusion criteria: (1) municipality authority’s decision of long-term nursing home care; (2) residential time 3 months or longer; (3) informed consent competency recognized by responsible doctor and nurse; and (4) capable of being interviewed. Results Principal component analysis and confirmative factor analyses indicated a unidimensional solution. Five of the original 13 items showed low reliability and validity; excluding these items revealed a good model fit for the one-dimensional 8-items measurement model, showing good internal consistency and validity for these 8 items. Conclusion Five out of the 13 original items were not high-quality indicators of quality-of-life showing low reliability and validity in this nursing home population. Significant factor loadings, goodness-of-fit indices and significant correlations in the expected directions with the selected constructs (anxiety, depression, self-transcendence, meaning-in-life, nurse-patient interaction, and joy-of-life) supported the psychometric properties of the OPQoL-brief questionnaire. Exploring the essence of quality-of-life when residing in a nursing home is highly warranted, followed by development and validation of new tools assessing quality-of-life in this population. Such knowledge and well-adapted scales for the nursing home population are beneficial and important for the further development of care quality in nursing homes, and consequently for quality-of-life and wellbeing in this population.
topic Factor analysis
Nursing home residents
Nursing home care
OPQoL-brief questionnaire
Psychometric properties
Quality of life
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12955-019-1245-3
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