Construct validity and internal consistency of the Breast Inflammatory Symptom Severity Index in lactating mothers with inflammatory breast conditions

Author:

Heron Emma1,McArdle Adelle2,Karim Md Nazmul3,Cooper Melinda4,Geddes Donna5,McKenna Leanda1

Affiliation:

1. School of Allied Health, Curtin University, Bentley, Western Australia, Australia

2. Monash Rural Health, Monash University, Churchill, Victoria, Australia

3. School of Public Health and Preventative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

4. MMC Physiotherapy, Kyneton, Victoria, Australia

5. School of Molecular Sciences, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia

Abstract

Background Inflammatory Conditions of the Lactating Breast (ICLB) affect more than one in five lactating mothers, yet no fully validated outcome measures exist to aid clinicians in their patient-centred care of women with ICLB. The Breast Inflammatory Symptom Severity Index (BISSI) is an ICLB-specific clinician administered patient-reported outcome measure, currently used by Australian clinicians, who treat mothers with ICLB. To date the BISSI has undergone partial psychometric development. This study, therefore, aimed to undertake the next stage of psychometric development by determining the construct validity and internal consistency of the BISSI. Methods A retrospective audit was conducted on patient records of 160 mothers who were treated for ICLB, at a private physiotherapy practice in Melbourne, Australia. An electronic data capture tool was used to collate BISSI scores and associated ICLB assessment variables. Construct validity was determined through factor analysis and discriminant performance. Reliability was determined by assessing measures of internal consistency. Results Factor analysis established that BISSI items (n = 10) loaded on to four factors, Wellness, Pain, Physical Characteristics of Affected Area (PCAA), and Inflammation, which together, explained 71.2% of variance. The remaining item (‘Wellness/sickness unspecified’) did not load. Wellness, Pain, PCAA and Inflammation factors individually and collectively displayed the ability to discriminate symptom severity, as scores were significantly higher in mothers with high symptom severity (assessed via AUC close to or >0.7 and P value <0.005 for each factor). The BISSI demonstrated internal consistency with an overall Cronbach alpha of 0.742. Conclusions The BISSI has adequate construct validity, demonstrating behaviour consistent with theoretical constructs of inflammation severity, via its dimensionality and ability to discriminate symptom severity. The BISSI also has adequate internal consistency demonstrating reliability. Therefore, clinicians can have confidence that the BISSI is valid, the individual item scores are correlated, and the concepts are consistently measured.

Funder

Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

Reference34 articles.

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3. Diagnosis and treatment of mastitis in breastfeeding women;Amir;Journal of Human Lactation,2014

4. Peripheral input and its importance for central sensitization;Baron;Annals of Neurology,2013

5. An update on the recognition and management of lactational breast inflammation;Betzold;Journal of Midwifery & Women’s Health,2007

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