Asking the "Right" Questions about Financial Hardship: Using Cognitive Interviews with Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer and Their Caregivers to Inform Measure Development.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q4 ONCOLOGY Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-03 DOI:10.1089/jayao.2024.0041
John M Salsman, Chandylen L Nightingale, Mollie R Canzona, Dianna S Howard, Reginald D Tucker-Seeley, Kimberly D Wiseman, David E Victorson, Joanna M Robles, Michael Roth, Regina Smith, Bryce B Reeve, Suzanne C Danhauer
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Abstract

Purpose: Financial hardship as a result of cancer treatment can have a significant and lasting negative impact on adolescents and young adults (AYAs) and their families. To address a lack of developmentally informed and psychometrically sound measures of financial hardship for AYAs and their caregivers, we used rigorous measurement development methods recommended by the National Institutes of Health's Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System® (PROMIS®) to determine comprehensibility and relevance of measure content. Methods: Our multi-step approach involved item identification, refinement, and generation; translatability and reading level review; and cognitive interviews. A purposive sample of 25 AYAs and 10 caregivers participated, ensuring representation across age, education, gender, race/ethnicity, and cancer type. Results: Fifty patient-reported and caregiver-reported items were developed across material, psychosocial, and behavioral subdomains of financial hardship. Translatability and reading level reviews resulted in 22 patient-reported and 25 caregiver-reported items being rewritten. Eighty-eight percent of patients and all caregivers described the items as easy to answer. Younger AYAs (15 to 25 years of age) were more likely to say the items were less relevant for them. Forty-six patient-reported and 48 caregiver-reported items were recommended for further testing. Conclusion: This study is the first to use in-depth qualitative methods to center AYA patient and caregiver experiences in the creation of new measures of financial hardship. Data support the comprehensibility and content validity of these preliminary item banks. Future large-scale, quantitative testing will lead to additional refinements and support the use of short forms and computer-adaptive testing for a diverse sample of AYAs and their caregivers.

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提出有关经济困难的 "正确 "问题:利用对青少年和年轻成人癌症患者及其照顾者的认知访谈来指导测量方法的开发。
目的癌症治疗导致的经济困难会对青少年及其家庭产生重大而持久的负面影响。为了解决缺乏针对青少年和他们的照顾者的经济困难的发展信息和心理测量方法的问题,我们采用了美国国立卫生研究院的患者报告结果测量信息系统 (Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System®, PROMIS®) 推荐的严格的测量开发方法,以确定测量内容的可理解性和相关性。方法:我们的多步骤方法包括项目识别、改进和生成;可翻译性和阅读水平审查;以及认知访谈。25名青少年和10名护理人员参加了有目的的抽样调查,确保了不同年龄、教育程度、性别、种族/民族和癌症类型的代表性。结果:在经济困难的物质、社会心理和行为子域中,开发了 50 个由患者和护理人员报告的项目。通过对可翻译性和阅读水平的审查,对患者报告的 22 个项目和护理人员报告的 25 个项目进行了改写。88%的患者和所有护理人员都认为这些项目易于回答。年轻的青壮年(15 至 25 岁)更有可能认为这些项目与他们的相关性较低。建议对病人报告的 46 个项目和护理人员报告的 48 个项目进行进一步测试。结论:本研究首次采用深入的定性方法,以老年青壮年患者和护理人员的经验为中心,创建了新的经济困难测量方法。数据支持了这些初步项目库的可理解性和内容有效性。未来的大规模定量测试将进一步完善这些项目库,并支持使用简表和计算机自适应测试对不同的亚裔患者及其护理人员样本进行测试。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
15.00%
发文量
114
期刊介绍: Journal of Adolescent and Young Adult Oncology (JAYAO) breaks new ground as the first cancer journal dedicated to all aspects of adolescent and young adult (AYA)-aged cancer patients and survivors. JAYAO is the only central forum for peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and research in the field, bringing together all AYA oncology stakeholders and professionals across disciplines, including clinicians, researchers, psychosocial and supportive care providers, and pediatric and adult cancer institutions.
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