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Rasch Analysis of the Norwegian Version of the Occupational Balance Questionnaire in a Sample of Occupational Therapy Students

Bonsaksen, Tore ; Lindstad, Marte Ørud ; Håkansson, Carita LU orcid ; Wagman, Petra and Cordier, Reinie (2021) In Occupational Therapy International 2021.
Abstract

Background. Recently, the Occupational Balance Questionnaire developed in Sweden was translated into Norwegian. No studies to date have examined the measurement properties of the Norwegian version of this questionnaire. Aim. The study is aimed at examining the psychometric properties of the Norwegian version of the Occupational Balance Questionnaire, the OBQ11-N. Methods. Along with sociodemographic data, 180 occupational therapy students enrolled at two Norwegian universities completed the OBQ11-N as well as one question each related to health and quality of life and some sociodemographic variables. Rasch analysis was employed for examining rating scale functioning, item and person validity, dimensionality, and differential item... (More)

Background. Recently, the Occupational Balance Questionnaire developed in Sweden was translated into Norwegian. No studies to date have examined the measurement properties of the Norwegian version of this questionnaire. Aim. The study is aimed at examining the psychometric properties of the Norwegian version of the Occupational Balance Questionnaire, the OBQ11-N. Methods. Along with sociodemographic data, 180 occupational therapy students enrolled at two Norwegian universities completed the OBQ11-N as well as one question each related to health and quality of life and some sociodemographic variables. Rasch analysis was employed for examining rating scale functioning, item and person validity, dimensionality, and differential item functioning. Results. Item categories were ordered, but there were potential gaps in the measurement of the construct. Person reliability was fair, whereas item reliability was low. Point biserial correlations were positive, indicating that all items contributed to the construct. Factor loadings were low for two items, and there were indices of a second underlying dimension and item redundancy. Many people were not aligned with the items, and some items functioned differently across various demographic variables. Conclusion and Significance. The OBQ11-N did not function as an adequate measure of occupational balance in a sample of students. Potentially, the detected measurement problems may be solved by adding more relevant items to a larger item pool, from which the best fitting items should be selected.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Occupational Therapy International
volume
2021
article number
8863453
publisher
Whurr Publishing
external identifiers
  • pmid:33976593
  • scopus:85105319884
ISSN
0966-7903
DOI
10.1155/2021/8863453
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
98201222-6e85-4720-b2ff-2cb0c75682b1
date added to LUP
2021-05-31 15:38:40
date last changed
2024-04-20 06:52:55
@article{98201222-6e85-4720-b2ff-2cb0c75682b1,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background. Recently, the Occupational Balance Questionnaire developed in Sweden was translated into Norwegian. No studies to date have examined the measurement properties of the Norwegian version of this questionnaire. Aim. The study is aimed at examining the psychometric properties of the Norwegian version of the Occupational Balance Questionnaire, the OBQ11-N. Methods. Along with sociodemographic data, 180 occupational therapy students enrolled at two Norwegian universities completed the OBQ11-N as well as one question each related to health and quality of life and some sociodemographic variables. Rasch analysis was employed for examining rating scale functioning, item and person validity, dimensionality, and differential item functioning. Results. Item categories were ordered, but there were potential gaps in the measurement of the construct. Person reliability was fair, whereas item reliability was low. Point biserial correlations were positive, indicating that all items contributed to the construct. Factor loadings were low for two items, and there were indices of a second underlying dimension and item redundancy. Many people were not aligned with the items, and some items functioned differently across various demographic variables. Conclusion and Significance. The OBQ11-N did not function as an adequate measure of occupational balance in a sample of students. Potentially, the detected measurement problems may be solved by adding more relevant items to a larger item pool, from which the best fitting items should be selected.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bonsaksen, Tore and Lindstad, Marte Ørud and Håkansson, Carita and Wagman, Petra and Cordier, Reinie}},
  issn         = {{0966-7903}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Whurr Publishing}},
  series       = {{Occupational Therapy International}},
  title        = {{Rasch Analysis of the Norwegian Version of the Occupational Balance Questionnaire in a Sample of Occupational Therapy Students}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8863453}},
  doi          = {{10.1155/2021/8863453}},
  volume       = {{2021}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}