Are the Items of the Starkstein Apathy Scale Fit for the Purpose of Measuring Apathy Post-Stroke?

Author:

Hum Stanley,Fellows Lesley K.,Lourenco Christiane,Mayo Nancy E.

Abstract

AbstractGiven the importance of apathy for stroke, we felt it was time to scrutinize the commonly used Starkstein Apathy Scale (SAS) for psychometric evidence that it is fit for this purpose. The objectives were to: (i) estimate the extent to which the SAS items fit a hierarchical continuum of the Rasch Model; and (ii) estimate the strength of the relationships between the Rasch analysed SAS and converging constructs related to stroke outcomes.MethodsData on 238 people with stroke (mean age=63.1 years (SD=12.1) women=37.4%) from a clinical trial of a community-based intervention targeting participation were available at 5 time points yielding 856 SAS questionnaires. SAS has 14 items, rated on a 4-point scale with higher values indicating more apathy. Psychometric properties were tested using Rasch partial-credit model, correlation, and regression. The construct was modeled as motivation with items rescored as high is better.ResultsRasch analysis indicated that the response options were disordered for 8/14 items, pointing to unreliability in the interpretation of the response options; they were consequently reduced from 4 to 3. Only 9/14 items fit the Rasch model and therefore suitable for creating a total score. The new rSAS was deemed unidimensional (residual correlations: < 0.3), reasonably reliable (person separation index: 0.74), with item-locations uniform across time, age, sex, and education. However, 30% of scores were >2 SD above the standardized mean but only 2/9 items covered this range (construct mistargeting).Apathy (rSAS/SAS) was correlated weakly with anxiety/depression and uncorrelated with physical capacity. Regression showed that the effect of apathy on participation and health perception was similar for rSAS/SAS versions: R2 participation measures ranged from 0.11 to 0.29; R2 for health perception was ∼0.25.When placed on the same scale (0-42), rSAS value was 6.5 units lower than SAS value with minimal floor/ceiling effects. Estimated change over time was identical (0.12 units/month) which was not substantial (1.44 units/year) but greater than expected assuming no change (t: 3.6 and 2.4).ConclusionThe retained items of the rSAS targeted behaviours more than beliefs and results support the rSAS as a robust measure of apathy in people with chronic stroke.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference36 articles.

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