Construct validity of the Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale: a factor analytic and Rasch study

Studies on structural validity of the Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale (QBPDS) showed uncertain unidimensionality. To investigate dimensionality and internal construct validity of the QBPDS, using advanced psychometric methods. Secondary analysis of data from a cross-sectional observational study,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEuropean journal of physical and rehabilitation medicine Vol. 57; no. 4
Main Authors FRANCHIGNONI, Franco, GIORDANO, Andrea, MONTICONE, Marco
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Italy 01.08.2021
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Summary:Studies on structural validity of the Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale (QBPDS) showed uncertain unidimensionality. To investigate dimensionality and internal construct validity of the QBPDS, using advanced psychometric methods. Secondary analysis of data from a cross-sectional observational study, SETTING: Outpatient rehabilitation hospital. 201 patients with chronic Low Back Pain (40% men; mean age 48±12 years). Confirmatory (CFA) and then Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA), and Rasch analysis were used. CFA could not provide a satisfactory one-factor solution. Thus, according to a preliminary parallel analysis, two factor structures were examined: i) a single-factor solution, that showed good model fit according to Goodness of Fit Index and Comparative Fit Index, acceptable fit according to Root Mean Square Error of Approximation, and poor fit according to Standardized Root Mean Square of Residuals; ii) a bi-factor solution, both showing a good fit in all 4 indices. The Explained Common Variance index was 0.87. Thus, it was considered appropriate to apply Rasch analysis to our QBPDS data. Four items underfit the Rasch model and showed (two by two) local dependency. Removing these 4 misfitting items resulted in an acceptable fit to the Rasch model of the 16 remaining items. All results pointed towards an essential unidimensionality of the QBPDS. Thus, we suggest to provisionally use the full QBPDS and its global score, pending further research on scale's construct validity. If the suboptimal performance of 4 items would be confirmed, the deletion of some of them could improve the metric quality of the scale. This study fills an evidence gap on important measurement properties of the QBPDS (namely, dimensionality and internal construct validity), thus representing a useful step towards the definition of the more suitable outcome measures for research and clinical practice in nonspecific chronic LBP.
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ISSN:1973-9087
1973-9095
DOI:10.23736/S1973-9087.21.06502-3