Abstract
Many people with osteoarthritis hold beliefs that physical activity is unhelpful or dangerous for their joints, despite high-level evidence suggesting otherwise. Recent advances in scientific understanding of osteoarthritis have led to new treatments that target an individual’s understanding both of their condition and the importance of best-practice management strategies, such as physical activity. Conceptual change has been proposed as an important mechanism by which cognitive interventions, such as pain science education, may reduce pain and improve function. There are currently no specific assessments of osteoarthritis conceptualisation to determine the effectiveness of cognitive interventions in effecting conceptual change in people with knee osteoarthritis. Therefore, we aimed to develop an item bank, as the first phase of developing a questionnaire to assess people’s conceptualisations about their knee osteoarthritis and the role of physical activity in managing their osteoarthritis. Using a guideline-informed mixed method design, a panel of experts identified domains relevant to conceptualisation about knee osteoarthritis and physical activity (knowledge, beliefs, understanding) based upon available evidence. The panel created 33 provisional items. Qualitative and quantitative pretesting were used to explore how people with knee osteoarthritis understood the provisional items. Eighteen people with knee osteoarthritis completed cognitive interviews about their comprehension of the wording/grammar of each provisional item. The provisional item bank was field tested with 100 people with knee osteoarthritis. Readability was adequate with a Flesch reading ease score of 57.7. Although 14.7% used the ‘Strongly agree’ response option, only 3.4% of responses used the ‘Strongly disagree’ option, suggesting possible response bias. Predictive quality testing identified relevant modifications to the questionnaire instructions. The panel of experts appraised the qualitative data to assess whether and how items should be modified to address the problems identified, resulting in a final item bank of 45 items that can be evaluated for psychometric properties in future research.
Funder
Arthritis Australia
University of South Australia
National Health and Medical Research Council
Arthritis Foundation of South Australia
Australian Government Research Training Program
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Reference87 articles.
1. Osteoarthritis: A Serious Disease. Submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration: OARSI Osteoarthritis Research Society International; 2016 Jan.
2. Epidemiology of osteoarthritis in Australia;LM March;Med J Aust,2004
3. Access Economics. The economic impact of arthritis in Australia 2007. Arthritis Aust. 2007; https://arthritisaustralia.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/painful-realities-report-access-economics.pdf
4. The global burden of hip and knee osteoarthritis: estimates from the Global Burden of Disease 2010 study;M Cross;Ann Rheum Dis,2014
5. Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. Guideline for the management of knee and hip osteoarthritis. 2018;
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献