TY - JOUR AU - Sritara P. AU - Wee H. AU - Kimman Merel AU - Vathesatogkit P. AU - Tai E. AU - Thumboo J. AU - Yamwong S. AU - Ratanachaiwong W. AU - Woodward Mark AB -

PURPOSE: To assess the construct validity of the Thai EuroQoL (EQ-5D) among an occupational population in Thailand. METHODS: Data were derived from a large cohort study among employees of the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand. In 2008 and 2009, 4,850 participants completed the Thai EQ-5D and Short-Form 36 version 2 (SF-36v2). Thai preferences weights were used to convert EQ-5D health states into EQ-5D index scores. Construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D was examined by specifying and testing hypotheses about the relationships between the EQ-5D, SF-36v2, and participants' demographic and medical characteristics. RESULTS: Construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D was supported by expected relationships with SF-36v2 scale and summary scores. For example, SF-36v2 scores on the mental health scale were much lower for participants who reported having problems on the EQ-5D anxiety/depression dimension compared to those reporting no problems (mean norm-based SF-36v2 scores: 52.9 vs. 41.8, p < 0.001). Additionally, reporting a problem in a given EQ-5D dimension was generally associated with lower SF-36v2 summary scores. The EQ-5D index score distinguished between groups of participants in the expected manner, on the basis of sex, age, education and self-reported health, thus providing evidence of known-groups validity. CONCLUSION: The study demonstrated good construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D in a large occupational population in Thailand.

AD - The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, Australia. AN - 22926727 BT - Quality of Life Research DP - NLM ET - 2012/08/29 LA - Eng N1 - Kimman, MerelVathesatogkit, PrinWoodward, MarkTai, E-ShyongThumboo, JulianYamwong, SukitRatanachaiwong, WipaWee, Hwee-LinSritara, PiyamitrQual Life Res. 2012 Aug 25. N2 -

PURPOSE: To assess the construct validity of the Thai EuroQoL (EQ-5D) among an occupational population in Thailand. METHODS: Data were derived from a large cohort study among employees of the Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand. In 2008 and 2009, 4,850 participants completed the Thai EQ-5D and Short-Form 36 version 2 (SF-36v2). Thai preferences weights were used to convert EQ-5D health states into EQ-5D index scores. Construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D was examined by specifying and testing hypotheses about the relationships between the EQ-5D, SF-36v2, and participants' demographic and medical characteristics. RESULTS: Construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D was supported by expected relationships with SF-36v2 scale and summary scores. For example, SF-36v2 scores on the mental health scale were much lower for participants who reported having problems on the EQ-5D anxiety/depression dimension compared to those reporting no problems (mean norm-based SF-36v2 scores: 52.9 vs. 41.8, p < 0.001). Additionally, reporting a problem in a given EQ-5D dimension was generally associated with lower SF-36v2 summary scores. The EQ-5D index score distinguished between groups of participants in the expected manner, on the basis of sex, age, education and self-reported health, thus providing evidence of known-groups validity. CONCLUSION: The study demonstrated good construct validity of the Thai EQ-5D in a large occupational population in Thailand.

PY - 2012 SN - 1573-2649 (Electronic)0962-9343 (Linking) T2 - Quality of Life Research TI - Validity of the Thai EQ-5D in an occupational population in Thailand ER -