A Psychometric Evaluation of the Staff-Reported EOLD-CAD Measure Among Nursing Home Residents With Cognitive Impairment.

IF 3.6 3区 医学 Q2 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1002/gps.70037
John G Cagle, Timothy E Stump, Wanzhu Tu, Mary Ersek, Alexander Floyd, Lieve Van den Block, Peiyan Zhang, Todd D Becker, Kathleen T Unroe
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Abstract

Objectives: The End-of-Life Dementia-Comfort Assessment in Dying (EOLD-CAD) scale is one of the few outcome instruments designed to capture symptom burden and well-being among nursing home residents with dementia; however, psychometric evaluations of the EOLD-CAD are limited. Although the instrument is often used to assess outcomes prospectively, it was originally developed and tested as a postmortem assessment. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the instrument properties of the EOLD-CAD using staff reports from a large sample of nursing home residents with cognitive impairment prior to death.

Methods: Using data from the multi-state UPLIFT clinical trial, this study evaluated the psychometric properties of the EOLD-CAD from 168 nursing home staff members reporting outcomes for 611 living residents with moderate to severe cognitive impairment. Staff also reported on resident quality-of-life using two different single item measures. We conducted confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and assessed construct validity, inter-item reliability, and observer report bias.

Results: CFA produced a four-factor solution. All factor loadings were > 0.40, ranging from 0.61-0.95 for Physical Distress, 0.71-0.91 for Dying Symptoms, 0.61-0.78 for Emotional Distress, and 0.89-0.94 for Well-Being. Model indices suggest a good fit to the data with root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.053 (95% CI = (0.044, 0.062)), comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.971, and standardized root mean square residual (SRMR) = 0.093, with the SRMR slightly above the conventional threshold of > 0.08. Based on intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), patterns of observer reports were identified among staff who provided data for multiple residents. ICCs were notably high (> 0.60) for Well-Being items. The EOLD-CAD elicited a Cronbach's alpha of 0.73, and the instrument was negatively correlated with items measuring resident quality of life.

Conclusions: We found that when the EOLD-CAD was completed by nursing home staff familiar with the respective residents, observer-based patterns were detectable. Such patterns were adjusted for in our CFA, from we found that the EOLD-CAD exhibited multidimensionality with a four-factor structure capturing: Physical Distress, Emotional Distress, Dying Symptoms, and Well-Being. In addition to the CFA, the EOLD-CAD demonstrated generally valid and reliable psychometric properties in our population of long-stay nursing home residents with moderate to severe cognitive impairment.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04520698.

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护理人员自述老年人认知功能障碍的心理测量评估。
目的:临终痴呆舒适评估(old - cad)量表是为数不多的旨在捕捉痴呆症养老院居民症状负担和幸福感的结果工具之一;然而,old - cad的心理测量评估是有限的。虽然该工具通常用于前瞻性评估结果,但它最初是作为死后评估而开发和测试的。本研究的目的是利用大量死亡前有认知障碍的养老院居民的工作人员报告来评估老年cad的仪器性能。方法:本研究利用多州UPLIFT临床试验数据,对168名养老院工作人员报告的611名中度至重度认知障碍的生活居民的结果进行了old - cad的心理测量特性评估。工作人员还使用两种不同的单项指标来报告居民的生活质量。我们进行了验证性因子分析(CFA),并评估了结构效度、项目间信度和观察者报告偏倚。结果:CFA产生了一个四因素解决方案。所有因子的负荷均为0.40,分别为生理痛苦的0.61-0.95、死亡症状的0.71-0.91、情绪痛苦的0.61-0.78和幸福感的0.89-0.94。模型指标与数据拟合良好,近似均方根误差(RMSEA) = 0.053 (95% CI =(0.044, 0.062)),比较拟合指数(CFI) = 0.971,标准化均方根残差(SRMR) = 0.093, SRMR略高于常规阈值> 0.08。基于类内相关系数(ICC),在为多个居民提供数据的工作人员中确定了观察员报告的模式。幸福感项目的icc值显著高(>.60)。old - cad的Cronbach's alpha值为0.73,该工具与测量居民生活质量的项目呈负相关。结论:我们发现,由熟悉各自住客的养老院工作人员完成的老年痴呆cad,可以检测到基于观察者的模式。这些模式在我们的CFA中进行了调整,因为我们发现old - cad表现出多维度,具有四个因素结构:身体痛苦、情绪痛苦、死亡症状和幸福感。除了CFA, old - cad在我们长期居住的有中度到重度认知障碍的养老院居民中显示了普遍有效和可靠的心理测量特性。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT04520698。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
2.50%
发文量
168
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The rapidly increasing world population of aged people has led to a growing need to focus attention on the problems of mental disorder in late life. The aim of the Journal is to communicate the results of original research in the causes, treatment and care of all forms of mental disorder which affect the elderly. The Journal is of interest to psychiatrists, psychologists, social scientists, nurses and others engaged in therapeutic professions, together with general neurobiological researchers. The Journal provides an international perspective on the important issue of geriatric psychiatry, and contributions are published from countries throughout the world. Topics covered include epidemiology of mental disorders in old age, clinical aetiological research, post-mortem pathological and neurochemical studies, treatment trials and evaluation of geriatric psychiatry services.
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