UpToDate
Official reprint from UpToDate®
www.uptodate.com ©2017 UpToDate®

Medline ® Abstract for Reference 18

of 'Evaluation of health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients with a serious life-threatening illness'

18
TI
Have a little faith: measuring the impact of illness on positive and negative aspects of faith.
AU
Salsman JM, Garcia SF, Lai JS, Cella D
SO
Psychooncology. 2012 Dec;21(12):1357-61. Epub 2011 Sep 9.
 
BACKGROUND: The importance of faith and its associations with health are well documented. As part of the Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System, items tapping positive and negative impact of illness (PII and NII) were developed across four content domains: Coping/Stress Response, Self-Concept, Social Connection/Isolation, and Meaning and Spirituality. Faith items were included within the concept of meaning and spirituality.
METHODS: This measurement model was tested on a heterogeneous group of 509 cancer survivors. To evaluate dimensionality, we applied two bi-factor models, specifying a general factor (PII or NII) and four local factors: Coping/Stress Response, Self-Concept, Social Connection/Isolation, and Meaning and Spirituality.
RESULTS: Bi-factor analysis supported sufficient unidimensionality within PII and NII item sets. The unidimensionality of both PII and NII item sets was enhanced by extraction of the faith items from the rest of the questions. Of the 10 faith items, nine demonstrated higher local than general factor loadings (range for localfactor loadings = 0.402 to 0.876), suggesting utility as a separate but related 'faith' factor. The same was true for only two of the remaining 63 items across the PII and NII item sets.
CONCLUSIONS: Although conceptually and to a degree empirically related to Meaning and Spirituality, Faith appears to be a distinct subdomain of PII and NII, better handled by distinct assessment. A 10-item measure of the impact of illness upon faith (II-Faith) was therefore assembled.
AD
Department of Medical Social Sciences, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA. j-salsman@northwestern.edu
PMID