• Qual Life Res · Feb 2012

    Development of a self-report measure of capability wellbeing for adults: the ICECAP-A.

    • Hareth Al-Janabi, Terry N Flynn, and Joanna Coast.
    • Health Economics Unit, Public Health Building, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK. h.aljanabi@bham.ac.uk
    • Qual Life Res. 2012 Feb 1; 21 (1): 167-76.

    PurposeThe benefits of health and social care are not confined to patient health alone and therefore broader measures of wellbeing may be useful for economic evaluation. This paper reports the development of a simple measure of capability wellbeing for adults (ICECAP-A).MethodsIn-depth, informant-led, interviews to identify the attributes of capability wellbeing were conducted with 36 adults in the UK. Eighteen semi-structured, repeat interviews were carried out to develop a capability-based descriptive system for the measure. Informants were purposively selected to ensure variation in socio-economic status, age, sex, ethnicity and health. Data analysis was carried out inductively and iteratively alongside interviews, and findings were used to shape the questions in later interviews.ResultsFive over-arching attributes of capability wellbeing were identified for the measure: "stability", "attachment", "achievement", "autonomy" and "enjoyment". One item, with four response categories, was developed for each attribute for the ICECAP-A descriptive system.ConclusionsThe ICECAP-A capability measure represents a departure from traditional health economics outcome measures, by treating health status as an influence over broader attributes of capability wellbeing. Further work is required to value and validate the attributes and test the sensitivity of the ICECAP-A to healthcare interventions.

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