Appropriate questionnaires for knee arthroplasty. Results of a survey of 3600 patients from The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry
(2001) In Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery: British Volume 83(3). p.339-344- Abstract
- The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry (SKAR) has recorded knee arthroplasties prospectively in Sweden since 1975. The only outcome measure available to date has been revision status. While questionnaires on health outcome may function as more comprehensive endpoints, it is unclear which are the most appropriate. We tested various outcome questionnaires in order to determine which is the best for patients who have had knee arthroplasty as applied in a cross-sectional, discriminative, postal survey. Four general health questionnaires (NHP, SF-12, SF-36 and SIP) and three disease/site-specific questionnaires (Lequesne, Oxford-12, and WOMAC) were tested on 3600 patients randomly selected from the SKAR. Differences were found between... (More)
- The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry (SKAR) has recorded knee arthroplasties prospectively in Sweden since 1975. The only outcome measure available to date has been revision status. While questionnaires on health outcome may function as more comprehensive endpoints, it is unclear which are the most appropriate. We tested various outcome questionnaires in order to determine which is the best for patients who have had knee arthroplasty as applied in a cross-sectional, discriminative, postal survey. Four general health questionnaires (NHP, SF-12, SF-36 and SIP) and three disease/site-specific questionnaires (Lequesne, Oxford-12, and WOMAC) were tested on 3600 patients randomly selected from the SKAR. Differences were found between questionnaires in response rate, time required for completion, the need for assistance, the efficiency of completion, the validity of the content and the reliability. The mean overall ranks for each questionnaire were generated. The SF-12 ranked the best for the general health, and the Oxford-12 for the disease/site-specific questionnaires. These two questionnaires could therefore be recommended as the most appropriate for use with a large knee arthroplasty database in a cross-sectional population. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1121310
- author
- Dunbar, M J ; Robertsson, Otto LU ; Ryd, Leif LU and Lidgren, Lars LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2001
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery: British Volume
- volume
- 83
- issue
- 3
- pages
- 339 - 344
- publisher
- British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:11341416
- ISSN
- 2044-5377
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- cdb6b23a-d83c-401f-a4ff-4f2597d554c4 (old id 1121310)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 11:43:38
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 19:59:34
@article{cdb6b23a-d83c-401f-a4ff-4f2597d554c4, abstract = {{The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry (SKAR) has recorded knee arthroplasties prospectively in Sweden since 1975. The only outcome measure available to date has been revision status. While questionnaires on health outcome may function as more comprehensive endpoints, it is unclear which are the most appropriate. We tested various outcome questionnaires in order to determine which is the best for patients who have had knee arthroplasty as applied in a cross-sectional, discriminative, postal survey. Four general health questionnaires (NHP, SF-12, SF-36 and SIP) and three disease/site-specific questionnaires (Lequesne, Oxford-12, and WOMAC) were tested on 3600 patients randomly selected from the SKAR. Differences were found between questionnaires in response rate, time required for completion, the need for assistance, the efficiency of completion, the validity of the content and the reliability. The mean overall ranks for each questionnaire were generated. The SF-12 ranked the best for the general health, and the Oxford-12 for the disease/site-specific questionnaires. These two questionnaires could therefore be recommended as the most appropriate for use with a large knee arthroplasty database in a cross-sectional population.}}, author = {{Dunbar, M J and Robertsson, Otto and Ryd, Leif and Lidgren, Lars}}, issn = {{2044-5377}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{339--344}}, publisher = {{British Editorial Society of Bone & Joint Surgery}}, series = {{Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery: British Volume}}, title = {{Appropriate questionnaires for knee arthroplasty. Results of a survey of 3600 patients from The Swedish Knee Arthroplasty Registry}}, volume = {{83}}, year = {{2001}}, }