Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease

The purpose was to compare and comment on use of the SF-36 and MOS-HIV instruments in studies of persons with HIV disease. Three medical information databases were searched to identify examples of HIV studies that included the MOS-HIV or SF-36. Thirty-nine and 14 published articles were identified f...

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Main Authors: Shahriar, Jim, Delate, Thomas, Hays, Ron, Coons, Stephen
Other Authors: Quality Programs, Health Care Services, Blue Shield of California, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA
Language:en
Published: BioMed Central 2003
Online Access:Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2003, 1:25 http://www.hqlo.com/content/1/1/25
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610156
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610156
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6101562016-05-22T03:01:44Z Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease Shahriar, Jim Delate, Thomas Hays, Ron Coons, Stephen Quality Programs, Health Care Services, Blue Shield of California, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA Express Scripts, Inc., Office of Research and Planning, Maryland Heights, MO 63043, USA Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1736, USA Division of HIV Policy and Outcomes Research, College of Pharmacy, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721-0207, USA The purpose was to compare and comment on use of the SF-36 and MOS-HIV instruments in studies of persons with HIV disease. Three medical information databases were searched to identify examples of HIV studies that included the MOS-HIV or SF-36. Thirty-nine and 14 published articles were identified for illustration in comparing the use of the MOS-HIV and SF-36 in HIV disease, respectively. Support for the reliability and construct validity of the MOS-HIV and SF-36 was found. Ceiling and floor effects were reported for both the MOS-HIV and SF-36 however, ceiling effects were more common for the MOS-HIV, in part due to fewer items in the physical, social, and role functioning domains. The MOS-HIV measures three domains hypothesized to be associated with the health deterioration of HIV disease not measured by the SF-36 however, these domains may not assess aspects of HIV disease that typify the majority of the persons with HIV disease today. National norms for the U.S. adult population (and other nations) are available for the SF-36. In addition, the SF-36 has been used in a wide variety of patient populations, enabling comparisons of HIV-infected persons with persons with other health conditions. No national norms for the MOS-HIV are available. We conclude that there is currently insufficient evidence in the literature to recommend the use of the MOS-HIV over the SF-36 in HIV-infected persons. Although the SF-36 is not targeted at HIV, it may be preferable to use the SF-36 over the MOS-HIV due to fewer ceiling effects, availability of national norms, and the vast amount of data for other populations in the U.S. and around the world. Head-to-head comparisons demonstrating the unique value of the MOS-HIV over the SF-36 are clearly needed. More importantly, additional work needs to be directed at comparing the MOS-HIV and other putatively HIV-targeted instruments to one another to help demarcate aspects of HRQOL that are truly generic versus specific to HIV disease. Using both a generic and targeted HRQOL measure is a good general strategy, but this has not been a typical practice in studies of HIV because the MOS-HIV is so similar in content to the SF-36. 2003 Article Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2003, 1:25 http://www.hqlo.com/content/1/1/25 10.1186/1477-7525-1-25 http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610156 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610156 1477-7525 Health and Quality of Life Outcomes en http://www.hqlo.com/content/1/1/25 © 2003 Shahriar et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL. BioMed Central
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language en
sources NDLTD
description The purpose was to compare and comment on use of the SF-36 and MOS-HIV instruments in studies of persons with HIV disease. Three medical information databases were searched to identify examples of HIV studies that included the MOS-HIV or SF-36. Thirty-nine and 14 published articles were identified for illustration in comparing the use of the MOS-HIV and SF-36 in HIV disease, respectively. Support for the reliability and construct validity of the MOS-HIV and SF-36 was found. Ceiling and floor effects were reported for both the MOS-HIV and SF-36 === however, ceiling effects were more common for the MOS-HIV, in part due to fewer items in the physical, social, and role functioning domains. The MOS-HIV measures three domains hypothesized to be associated with the health deterioration of HIV disease not measured by the SF-36 === however, these domains may not assess aspects of HIV disease that typify the majority of the persons with HIV disease today. National norms for the U.S. adult population (and other nations) are available for the SF-36. In addition, the SF-36 has been used in a wide variety of patient populations, enabling comparisons of HIV-infected persons with persons with other health conditions. No national norms for the MOS-HIV are available. We conclude that there is currently insufficient evidence in the literature to recommend the use of the MOS-HIV over the SF-36 in HIV-infected persons. Although the SF-36 is not targeted at HIV, it may be preferable to use the SF-36 over the MOS-HIV due to fewer ceiling effects, availability of national norms, and the vast amount of data for other populations in the U.S. and around the world. Head-to-head comparisons demonstrating the unique value of the MOS-HIV over the SF-36 are clearly needed. More importantly, additional work needs to be directed at comparing the MOS-HIV and other putatively HIV-targeted instruments to one another to help demarcate aspects of HRQOL that are truly generic versus specific to HIV disease. Using both a generic and targeted HRQOL measure is a good general strategy, but this has not been a typical practice in studies of HIV because the MOS-HIV is so similar in content to the SF-36.
author2 Quality Programs, Health Care Services, Blue Shield of California, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA
author_facet Quality Programs, Health Care Services, Blue Shield of California, San Francisco, CA 94105, USA
Shahriar, Jim
Delate, Thomas
Hays, Ron
Coons, Stephen
author Shahriar, Jim
Delate, Thomas
Hays, Ron
Coons, Stephen
spellingShingle Shahriar, Jim
Delate, Thomas
Hays, Ron
Coons, Stephen
Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
author_sort Shahriar, Jim
title Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
title_short Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
title_full Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
title_fullStr Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
title_full_unstemmed Commentary on using the SF-36 or MOS-HIV in studies of persons with HIV disease
title_sort commentary on using the sf-36 or mos-hiv in studies of persons with hiv disease
publisher BioMed Central
publishDate 2003
url Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2003, 1:25 http://www.hqlo.com/content/1/1/25
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/610156
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/610156
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