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. 1998 Jan;27(1):13-8.
doi: 10.1093/ageing/27.1.13.

Measuring health status in older patients. The SF-36 in practice

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Measuring health status in older patients. The SF-36 in practice

S G Parker et al. Age Ageing. 1998 Jan.

Abstract

Objective: To examine the use of the Medical Outcomes Study short form 36-item (SF-36) health status measure in older patients receiving health care; to explore the influence of age and physical and cognitive status on response to and completion of the SF-36 questionnaire.

Design: Prospective observational study.

Settings: Hospital and ambulatory patients aged 65 years and over in the medical and surgical wards and outpatient department of a teaching hospital and a local general practitioner's surgery.

Subjects: 1014 hospital inpatients, 80 hospital outpatients and 40 patients attending their general practitioner's surgery.

Main outcome measures: Response rates, overall rates of completion (sufficient to calculate a valid SF-36 score) and completion of individual questions.

Results: 37 out of 40 ambulatory patients in general practice (93%) and 71 out of 80 outpatients (89%) returned a self-completed questionnaire. In hospital inpatients the overall response rate was only 46% (369 of 802). This was improved by interview administration to 77.4% (164 of 212). Logistic regression analysis revealed that self-completion, cognitive dysfunction, disability and age were all independently associated with poor overall response rates. Among those patients who returned a completed questionnaire, completion of individual questions sufficient to calculate a valid score was variable. Only 62.5% of inpatients who self-completed a questionnaire gave sufficient response to calculate a score on the mental health subscale, compared with 93.7% of general practice patients.

Conclusion: The self-administered questionnaire is unacceptable for older hospital inpatients. Use of an interviewer improves response, but factors which influence health status, such as physical and cognitive dysfunction, have a significant effect on response rates. Therefore the utility of the SF-36 in its present form as a routine health status measure for use in older hospital inpatients is questioned.

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