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Development of the Patient Activation Measure
(PAM): Conceptualizing and Measuring Activation in Patients
and Consumers
Souce: Health Services Research. 2004 Aug; 39(4
Pt 1): 1005-1026
Judith H. Hibbard, Eldon R. Mahoney, Jean Stockard, and Martin
Tusler
Background: Controlling costs and achieving
health care quality improvements require the participation
of activated and informed consumers and patients.
Objectives: We describe a process for
conceptualizing and operationalizing what it means to be "activated"
and delineate the process we used to develop a measure for
assessing "activation," and the psychometric properties
of that measure.
Methods: We used the convergence of the
findings from a national expert consensus panel and patient
focus groups to define the concept and identify the domains
of activation. These domains were operationalized by constructing
a large item pool. Items were pilot-tested and initial psychometric
analysis performed using Rasch methodology. The third stage
refined and extended the measure. The fourth stage used a
national probability sample to assess the measure's psychometric
performance overall and within different subpopulations.
Study Sample: Convenience samples of
patients with and without chronic illness, and a national
probability sample (N=1,515) are included at different stages
in the research.
Conclusions: The Patient Activation Measure
is a valid, highly reliable, unidimensional, probabilistic
Guttman-like scale that reflects a developmental model of
activation. Activation appears to involve four stages: (1)
believing the patient role is important, (2) having the confidence
and knowledge necessary to take action, (3) actually taking
action to maintain and improve one's health, and (4) staying
the course even under stress. The measure has good psychometric
properties indicating that it can be used at the individual
patient level to tailor intervention and assess changes.
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