Rasch Analysis of the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System
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Elsevier Inc. on behalf of American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
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CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Abstract
Context
The Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS) is a widely used multisymptom assessment tool in cancer and palliative care settings, but its psychometric properties have not been widely tested using modern psychometric methods such as Rasch analysis.
Objectives
To apply Rasch analysis to the ESAS in a community palliative care setting and determine its suitability for assessing symptom burden in this group.
Methods
ESAS data collected from 229 patients enrolled in a community hospice service were evaluated using a partial credit Rasch model with RUMM2030 software (RUMM Laboratory Pty, Ltd., Duncraig, WA). Where disordered thresholds were discovered, item rescoring was undertaken. Rasch model fit and differential item functioning were evaluated after each iterative phase.
Results
Uniform rescoring was necessary for all 12 items to display ordered thresholds. The best model fit was achieved after item rescoring and combining three pairs of locally dependent items into three superitems (χ2 = 29.56 [27]; P = 0.33) that permitted ordinal-to-interval conversion.
Conclusion
The ESAS satisfied unidimensional Rasch model expectations in a 12-item format after minor modifications. This included uniform rescoring of the disordered response categories and creating superitems to improve model fit and clinical utility. The accuracy of the ESAS scores can be improved by using ordinal-to-interval conversion tables published in the article.
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Sprague E, Siegert RJ, Medvedev O, Roberts MH. (2018). Rasch Analysis of the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. 55. 5. (pp. 1356-1363).
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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as (c) The author/s

