Development and Testing of a Short Form of
the Patient Activation Measure
Souce: Health Services Research. 2005 Dec; 40
(6p1): 1918-1930, Judith H. Hibbard, Eldon R. Mahoney, Jean Stockard, and Martin
Tusler
Objective: The Patient Activation Measure
(PAM) is a 22-item measure that assesses patient knowledge,
skill, and confidence for self-management. The measure was
developed using Rasch analyses and is an interval level, unidimensional,
Guttman-like measure. The current analysis is aimed at reducing
the number of items in the measure while maintaining adequate
precision.
Study Methods: We relied on an iterative
use of Rasch analysis to identify items that could be eliminated
without loss of significant precision and reliability. With
each item deletion, the item scale locations were recalibrated
and the person reliability evaluated to check if and how much
of a decline in precision of measurement resulted from the
deletion of the item.
Data Sources: The data used in the analysis
were the same data used in the development of the original
22-item measure. These data were collected in 2003 via a telephone
survey of 1,515 randomly selected adults.
Principal Findings: The analysis yielded a 13-item measure
that has psychometric properties similar to the original 22-item
version. The scores for the 13-item measure range in value
from 38.6 to 53.0 (on a theoretical 0100 point scale).
The range of values is essentially unchanged from the original
22-item version. Subgroup analysis suggests that there is
a slight loss of precision with some subgroups.
Conclusions: The results of the analysis
indicate that the shortened 13-item version is both reliable
and valid.
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