The Psychometric Performance of the EQ Health and Wellbeing in Caregivers of Persons Living With Dementia

Abstract

Objectives

The EQ Health and Wellbeing (EQ-HWB) is a generic instrument recently developed for use in economic evaluations across public health and social care, including impacts on caregivers. Providing informal care to a person living with dementia can significantly affect the health and well-being of carers. However, it is unclear to what extent the EQ-HWB can capture such impacts. We aimed to investigate the psychometric properties of the EQ-HWB compared with other available instruments in caregivers of persons living with dementia.

Methods

An online survey included demographics, informal care-related questions, and quality-of-life measures suitable for caregivers (C-DEMQOL and CarerQol) and the 25-item EQ-HWB. We used the UK pilot value set for the index scores for the EQ-HWB-S (9-item short form). The psychometric properties of the EQ-HWB and EQ-HWB-S were assessed in terms of acceptability (missing data), response distribution, known-groups validity analysis using t tests and one-way ANOVAs (Cohen’s d and Eta squared for effect size), convergent validity (Spearman correlations), and an exploration of dimensionality using exploratory factor analysis.

Results

In known-group validity analysis, the EQ-HWB instruments performed similarly to the C-DEMQOL in terms of effect sizes across a range of variables and slightly better than the CarerQol on some variables. At the item level, 13 of the 25 items could discriminate respondents by caregiving time and 23 of 25 items by caregivers’ general self-reported health. Most hypothesized correlations in the convergent validity analysis were found to be above 0.3.

Conclusions

Our results suggest that the EQ-HWB instruments performed well in this population.

Authors

Cate Bailey Tessa Peasgood Bernhard Michalowsky Lidia Engel

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