Objectives Carer quality-of-life (QoL) effects are recommended for inclusion in economic evaluations, but little is known about the relative performance of different types of QoL measures with carers. This study evaluated the validity and responsiveness of 3 care-related QoL measures (the Carer Experience Scale [CES], CarerQoL-7D, and ASCOT-Carer), 1 health-related QoL measure (the EQ-5D-5L), and 1 generic QoL measure (the ICECAP-A). Methods Validity and responsiveness were assessed in a UK sample of informal carers of adults with dementia, stroke, mental illness, or rheumatoid arthritis. A questionnaire containing the 5 QoL measures was posted to carers identified through the Family Resources Survey (N = 1004). Hypotheses regarding the ant...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Purpose: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Objectives: To compare the psychometric properties of the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit for car...
Background. To incorporate the spillover effects experienced by carers providing informal care in he...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A 2008 European consensus on research outcome measures in dementia care c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
Purpose: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop a new psychometric tool for the assessment of qua...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Purpose: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Objectives: To compare the psychometric properties of the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit for car...
Background. To incorporate the spillover effects experienced by carers providing informal care in he...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A 2008 European consensus on research outcome measures in dementia care c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
OBJECTIVES: There is an increasing interest in how well informal carers are supported within their c...
Purpose: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to develop a new psychometric tool for the assessment of qua...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
PURPOSE: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...
Purpose: Validity is a contextual aspect of a scale which may differ across sample populations and s...