Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers

Abstract Background Decisional regret during or after medical treatments is linked to significant distress. Regret affects not only patients but also caregivers having an active or passive role during decision making. The Decision Regret Scale (DRS) is a self‐report measure for regret in patients af...

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Main Authors: Markus W. Haun, Alexander Schakowski, Ariane Preibsch, Hans‐Christoph Friederich, Mechthild Hartmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-10-01
Series:Health Expectations
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12941
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spelling doaj-418dc25435d84279bb604fe84732aded2020-11-25T00:57:28ZengWileyHealth Expectations1369-65131369-76252019-10-012251089109910.1111/hex.12941Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for CaregiversMarkus W. Haun0Alexander Schakowski1Ariane Preibsch2Hans‐Christoph Friederich3Mechthild Hartmann4Department of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics Heidelberg University Heidelberg GermanyDepartment of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics Heidelberg University Heidelberg GermanyDepartment of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics Heidelberg University Heidelberg GermanyDepartment of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics Heidelberg University Heidelberg GermanyDepartment of General Internal Medicine and Psychosomatics Heidelberg University Heidelberg GermanyAbstract Background Decisional regret during or after medical treatments is linked to significant distress. Regret affects not only patients but also caregivers having an active or passive role during decision making. The Decision Regret Scale (DRS) is a self‐report measure for regret in patients after treatment decisions. However, practical and psychometrically robust instruments assessing regret in caregivers are lacking. Objective To develop and validate a caregiver version of the DRS (Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers [DRS‐C]). Design Psychometric validation based on a web survey. Setting and participants 361 caregivers of deceased German people/patients with cancer. Main variables studied Besides structural validity and test‐retest reliability, we evaluated measurement invariance accounting for gender, age and closeness of relationship, and tested hypotheses on convergent/discriminant validity. Results Forty‐five per cent of all caregivers demonstrated decision regret. Confirmatory factor analyses strongly supported the unidimensional structure of the DRS‐C and pointed to strict invariance. The DRS‐C demonstrated very good internal consistency (α = 0.83, 95% CI [0.81, 0.86]) and test‐retest reliability (ICC [A,1] = 0.73, 95% CI [0.59, 0.83]) along with sound convergent/discriminant validity. Concerning responsiveness, DRS‐C scores remained stable over a 12‐week period in 83.3% of all caregivers. Receiver operating characteristic analysis yielded a cut point of 43 for the identification of significant decision regret (AUC = 0.62, 95% CI [0.56, 0.68]). Discussion and conclusions The lack of a gold standard instrument prevented us from examining the criterion validity and determining a minimally important difference. Nevertheless, the DRS‐C provides valid and reliable information regarding caregiver regret following medical decisions. Above all, it captures a crucial aspect of the treatment experience in caregivers.https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12941aggressiveness of carecancercaregiverconfirmatory factor analysisdecision regretmeasurement invariance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Markus W. Haun
Alexander Schakowski
Ariane Preibsch
Hans‐Christoph Friederich
Mechthild Hartmann
spellingShingle Markus W. Haun
Alexander Schakowski
Ariane Preibsch
Hans‐Christoph Friederich
Mechthild Hartmann
Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
Health Expectations
aggressiveness of care
cancer
caregiver
confirmatory factor analysis
decision regret
measurement invariance
author_facet Markus W. Haun
Alexander Schakowski
Ariane Preibsch
Hans‐Christoph Friederich
Mechthild Hartmann
author_sort Markus W. Haun
title Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
title_short Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
title_full Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
title_fullStr Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
title_full_unstemmed Assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased German people with cancer—A psychometric validation of the Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers
title_sort assessing decision regret in caregivers of deceased german people with cancer—a psychometric validation of the decision regret scale for caregivers
publisher Wiley
series Health Expectations
issn 1369-6513
1369-7625
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Decisional regret during or after medical treatments is linked to significant distress. Regret affects not only patients but also caregivers having an active or passive role during decision making. The Decision Regret Scale (DRS) is a self‐report measure for regret in patients after treatment decisions. However, practical and psychometrically robust instruments assessing regret in caregivers are lacking. Objective To develop and validate a caregiver version of the DRS (Decision Regret Scale for Caregivers [DRS‐C]). Design Psychometric validation based on a web survey. Setting and participants 361 caregivers of deceased German people/patients with cancer. Main variables studied Besides structural validity and test‐retest reliability, we evaluated measurement invariance accounting for gender, age and closeness of relationship, and tested hypotheses on convergent/discriminant validity. Results Forty‐five per cent of all caregivers demonstrated decision regret. Confirmatory factor analyses strongly supported the unidimensional structure of the DRS‐C and pointed to strict invariance. The DRS‐C demonstrated very good internal consistency (α = 0.83, 95% CI [0.81, 0.86]) and test‐retest reliability (ICC [A,1] = 0.73, 95% CI [0.59, 0.83]) along with sound convergent/discriminant validity. Concerning responsiveness, DRS‐C scores remained stable over a 12‐week period in 83.3% of all caregivers. Receiver operating characteristic analysis yielded a cut point of 43 for the identification of significant decision regret (AUC = 0.62, 95% CI [0.56, 0.68]). Discussion and conclusions The lack of a gold standard instrument prevented us from examining the criterion validity and determining a minimally important difference. Nevertheless, the DRS‐C provides valid and reliable information regarding caregiver regret following medical decisions. Above all, it captures a crucial aspect of the treatment experience in caregivers.
topic aggressiveness of care
cancer
caregiver
confirmatory factor analysis
decision regret
measurement invariance
url https://doi.org/10.1111/hex.12941
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