• Qual Life Res · Sep 2012

    PROMIS® Parent Proxy Report Scales: an item response theory analysis of the parent proxy report item banks.

    • James W Varni, David Thissen, Brian D Stucky, Yang Liu, Hally Gorder, Debra E Irwin, Esi Morgan DeWitt, Jin-Shei Lai, Dagmar Amtmann, and Darren A DeWalt.
    • Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine, Texas A&M University, 3137 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843-3137, USA. jvarni@arch.tamu.edu
    • Qual Life Res. 2012 Sep 1; 21 (7): 1223-40.

    ObjectiveThe objective of the present study is to describe the item response theory (IRT) analysis of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS(®)) pediatric parent proxy-report item banks and the measurement properties of the new PROMIS(®) Parent Proxy Report Scales for ages 8-17 years.MethodsParent proxy-report items were written to parallel the pediatric self-report items. Test forms containing the items were completed by 1,548 parent-child pairs. CCFA and IRT analyses of scale dimensionality and item local dependence, and IRT analyses of differential item functioning were conducted.ResultsParent proxy-report item banks were developed and IRT parameters are provided. The recommended unidimensional short forms for the PROMIS(®) Parent Proxy Report Scales are item sets that are subsets of the pediatric self-report short forms, setting aside items for which parent responses exhibit local dependence. Parent proxy-report demonstrated moderate to low agreement with pediatric self-report.ConclusionsThe study provides initial calibrations of the PROMIS(®) parent proxy-report item banks and the creation of the PROMIS(®) Parent Proxy-Report Scales. It is anticipated that these new scales will have application for pediatric populations in which pediatric self-report is not feasible.

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