Contact Jenny Marwitz, MA,University of Alabama at Birmingham at
Citation Marwitz, J. (2000). The Family Needs Questionnaire. The Center for Outcome Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/ combi/fnq ( accessed
).
FNQ Properties
Evaluation of the psychometric properties has been reported extensively (Camplair, Kreutzer, & Doherty, 1990; Kreutzer, Serio, Bergquist, 1994; Serio, Kreutzer, Witol, 1997; Serio, Kreutzer, and Gervasio, 1995). As an index of internal consistency, Spearman-Brown split-half reliability was computed (Kreutzer, Serio, Bergquist, 1994). A coefficient of 0.75 was considered acceptable, as the content of the FNQ items is diverse, and some variability between respondents was anticipated.
A factor analysis study was completed using responses from 178 individuals (Serio, Kreutzer, Witol, 1997). Six factors were revealed: Health Information, Emotional Support, Instrumental Support, Professional Support, Community Support Network, and Involvement with Care. Alpha reliability coefficients for the six subscales ranged from 0.78 to 0.89, evidence that the FNQ is comprised of reliable and independent needs factors. The factor analysis also provided support for the FNQ's construct validity. Specifically, five of the need factors corresponded to dimensions of social support identified by Wortman (1989). Additional support for the FNQ's validity comes from another investigation (Serio, Kreutzer, and Gervasio, 1995) of 180 family members of outpatients with brain injuries. Examination of the obtained responses indicated that the FNQ has content validity and clinical utility.
The table below lists the six scales, sample items within each scale, and corresponding item numbers.
Health Information
Item #
Sample Items
1
to be shown that medical, educational or rehabilitation staff respect the patient's needs or wishes
4
to be told about all changes in the patient's medical status
Emotional Support
Item #
Sample Items
29
to have my significant other understand how difficult it is for me
30
to have my partner or friends understand how difficult it is for me
Instrumental Support
Item #
Sample Items
22
to have help keeping the house (e.g., shopping, cleaning, cooking, etc.)
23
to have help from other members of the family in taking care of the patient
Professional Support
Item #
Sample Items
16
to be told how long each of the patient's problems is expected to last
20
to have enough resources for the patient (e.g., rehabilitation programs, physical therapy, counseling, job counseling)
Community Support Network
Item #
Sample Items
31
to have other family members understand the patient's problems
32
to have the patient's friends understand his/her problems
Involvement with Care
Item #
Sample Items
3
to give my opinions daily to others involved in the patient's care, rehabilitation, or education
8
to be shown that my opinions are used in planning the patient's treatment, rehabilitation or education