Contact Margaret
Brown, PhD, Mount Sinai School of Medicine at
Citation Brown, M. (2006). Participation
Objective, Participation Subjective. The Center for Outcome
Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/
combi/pops ( accessed
).
POPS
Properties
POPS:
Reliability and validity
A discussion of reliability and validity issues with respect to
the POPS is provided in Brown et al. (2004). The major point made
there is that although one can shed some light on reliability and
validity using typical psychometric approaches, such methods are
inherently flawed in assessing “reliability” and “validity”
with respect to instruments such as the POPS. The challenge of adequately
assessing POPS reliability and validity is complex because the instrument
is complex, providing both objective descriptive data as well as
subjective data, the latter of which presumably draws on an underlying
construct (i.e., cross-domain positive-negative view of participation
in household and community), while objective data presumably do
not. In terms of reliability, the typical assumption of classical
test theory that, for example, what is being measured will stay
relatively “constant” from test to retest while most
of the variance detected is equivalent to error, does not hold fully
when what is being measured is “activity in the past week
or month”. Proportionately larger real differences in activities
from week to week will make “reliability” of reporting
appear lower than it “truly” is. Also with respect to
assessing reliability, because of the disparate nature of items
included in the POPS, within the PO total score and PO subscale
scores no high within-scale correlations were expected.
Test-retest
reliability of the POPS was tested with repeated measures of the
POPS one to three weeks apart on a subsample of 65 people with TBI.
Intraclass correlation coefficients for the Time 1 and Time 2 subscale
scores were in the range of 0.37-0.89, with the ICC of the total
PO score reaching 0.75, while the ICC of the total PS score was
0.80. These values, given the caveats provided above, suggest acceptable
levels of reliability. In support of this conclusion, we cite the
fact that the 0.89 value was associated with the Domestic Life subscale,
for which one would expect a low level of day-to-day true variability.
Thus, the subscale with the least expected variability was associated
with a high level of reliability of reporting, in people with TBI.
Validity
of the POPS was not assessed comparing its pattern of scores to
a “gold standard”, as we believe that no measure provides
such a standard at present. (None of the existing measures have
been shown to be valid (or invalid) for the variety of purposes
for which they are used, e.g., documenting individual change, describing
population trends, evaluating “success” in a rehabilitation
program, etc.) Instead, we developed a series of expectations of
how PO and PS scores should perform if they are validly reflecting
the constructs targeted by each of the components
First,
we expected to see some differences between the subsamples of people
with mild versus moderate-severe TBI and a non-disabled comparison
group. Second, we expected certain logical consequences of engaging
in a low versus a high level of activity in a particular area for
the person’s desire for change in that area. For example,
those doing nothing or a low amount of the activity would be more
likely than those very active to want to “do more” rather
than “less” or “the same”. Third, we expected
higher correlations of PS scores than PO scores with measures of
negative-positive affect such as scales of depressed mood. Strong
support was found in the data presented supporting most of the expectations
enumerated in the article.
In
sum, preliminary evidence is provided that suggests that the POPS
can obtain self-report data of an individual’s participation
in home and community activities and of his/her feelings about the
importance of those activities and how satisfied he/she is with
level of engagement. The data appear reliable and valid within the
limits of the methods that were available to demonstrate these characteristics
of the POPS.