2012
DOI: 10.3310/hta16320
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Developing and testing methods for deriving preference-based measures of health from condition-specific measures (and other patient-based measures of outcome).

Abstract: An electronic version of this title, in Adobe Acrobat format, is available for downloading free of charge for personal use from the HTA website (www.hta.ac.uk). A fully searchable DVD is also available (see below).Printed copies of HTA journal series issues cost £20 each (post and packing free in the UK) to both public and private sector purchasers from our despatch agents.Non-UK purchasers will have to pay a small fee for post and packing. For European countries the cost is £2 per issue and for the rest of th… Show more

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Cited by 149 publications
(223 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(196 reference statements)
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“…Twelve of the 33 classification systems that were derived from an existing instrument adopted the 'health state classification approach' developed by Brazier et al [1], which employs statistical techniques to determine the dimensional structure of an instrument, followed by a combination of traditional psychometric analysis with one of the "new" psychometric techniques (Rasch analysis or item response theory) to select one item to represent each dimension. Rasch analysis is based on the idea that there is a latent scale for the construct being measured (in this case, HRQoL), on which both respondents and item response levels are located.…”
Section: Overview Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Twelve of the 33 classification systems that were derived from an existing instrument adopted the 'health state classification approach' developed by Brazier et al [1], which employs statistical techniques to determine the dimensional structure of an instrument, followed by a combination of traditional psychometric analysis with one of the "new" psychometric techniques (Rasch analysis or item response theory) to select one item to represent each dimension. Rasch analysis is based on the idea that there is a latent scale for the construct being measured (in this case, HRQoL), on which both respondents and item response levels are located.…”
Section: Overview Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several (n = 5) of the studies that took this approach employed expert opinion to enhance content validity and clinical relevance and to avoid redundancy. Brazier et al [1] also recommend exploring whether the number of item response levels can be reduced, using Rasch analysis and response frequencies; only one of these studies [71] did not do so.…”
Section: Overview Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations