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Measuring the impact and distress of health problems from the individual's perspective: development of the Perceived Impact of Problem Profile (PIPP)

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posted on 2024-07-12, 17:32 authored by Julie F. Pallant, RoseAnne Misajon, Elizabeth Bennett, Lenore Manderson
Background: The aim of this study was to develop and conduct preliminary validation of the Perceived Impact of Problem Profile (PIPP). Based on the biopsychosocial model of health and functioning, the PIPP was intended as a generic research and clinical measurement tool to assess the impact and distress of health conditions from the individuals' perspective. The ICF classification system was used to guide the structure of the PIPP with subscales included to assess impact on selfcare, mobility, participation, relationships and psychological well-being. While the ICF focuses on the classification of objective health and health related status, the PIPP broadens this focus to address the individuals' subjective experience of their health condition. Methods: An item pool of 23 items assessing both impact and distress on five key domains was generated. These were administered to 169 adults with mobility impairment. Rasch analysis using RUMM2020 was conducted to assess the psychometric properties of each set of items. Preliminary construct validation of the PIPP was performed using the EQ5D. Results: For both the Impact and Distress scales of the PIPP, the five subscales; (Self-care, Mobility, Participation, Relationships, and Psychological Well-being) showed adequate psychometric properties, demonstrating fit to the Rasch model. All subscales showed adequate person separation reliability and no evidence of differential item functioning for sex, age, educational level or rural vs urban residence. Preliminary validity testing using the EQ5D items provided support for the subscales. Conclusion: This preliminary study, using a sample of adults with mobility impairment, provides support for the psychometric properties of the PIPP as a potential clinical and research measurement tool. The PIPP provides a brief, but comprehensive means to assess the key ICF components, focusing on the individuals' perspective of the impact and distress caused by their health condition. Further validation of its use across different health conditions and varying cultural settings is required.

Funding

Self, the social body and wellbeing: Embodiment and adaptation in cross-cultural perspective

Australian Research Council

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Maintaining the social self: Living with acquired disability in Australia, Thailand and Vietnam

Australian Research Council

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ISSN

1477-7525

Journal title

Health and Quality of Life Outcomes

Volume

4

Issue

36

Pagination

12 pp

Publisher

BioMed Central

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2006 Pallant et al. This an Open Access article distributed under The terms of The Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided The original work is properly cited.

Language

eng

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