TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing quality of life in severe obesity
T2 - development and psychometric properties of the ORWELL-R
AU - Camolas, José
AU - Ferreira, André
AU - Mannucci, Edoardo
AU - Mascarenhas, Mário
AU - Carvalho, Manuel
AU - Moreira, Pedro
AU - do Carmo, Isabel
AU - Santos, Osvaldo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Springer International Publishing Switzerland.
PY - 2016/6/1
Y1 - 2016/6/1
N2 - Purpose: Several health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) dimensions are affected by obesity. Our goal was to characterize the psychometric properties of the ORWELL-R, a new obesity-related quality-of-life instrument for assessing the “individual experience of overweightness”. Methods: This psychometric assessment included two different samples: one multicenter clinical sample, used for assessing internal consistency, construct validity and temporal reliability; and a community sample (collected through a cross-sectional mailing survey design), used for additional construct validity assessment and model fit confirmation. Results: Overall, 946 persons participated (188 from the clinical sample; 758 from community sample). An alpha coefficient of 0.925 (clinical sample) and 0.934 (community sample) was found. Three subscales were identified (53.2 % of variance): Body environment experience (alpha = 0.875), Illness perception and distress (alpha = 0.864), Physical symptoms (alpha = 0.674). Adequate test–retest reliability has been confirmed (ICC: 0.78 for the overall score). ORWELL-R scores were worse in the clinical sample. Worst HRQoL, as measured by higher ORWELL-R scores, was associated with BMI increases. ORWELL-R scores were associated with IWQOL-Lite and lower scores in happiness. Conclusions: ORWELL-R shows good internal consistency and adequate test–retest reliability. Good construct validity was also observed (for convergent and discriminant validity) and confirmed through confirmatory factor analysis (in both clinical and community samples). Presented data sustain ORWELL-R as a reliable and useful instrument to assess obesity-related QoL, in both research and clinical contexts.
AB - Purpose: Several health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL) dimensions are affected by obesity. Our goal was to characterize the psychometric properties of the ORWELL-R, a new obesity-related quality-of-life instrument for assessing the “individual experience of overweightness”. Methods: This psychometric assessment included two different samples: one multicenter clinical sample, used for assessing internal consistency, construct validity and temporal reliability; and a community sample (collected through a cross-sectional mailing survey design), used for additional construct validity assessment and model fit confirmation. Results: Overall, 946 persons participated (188 from the clinical sample; 758 from community sample). An alpha coefficient of 0.925 (clinical sample) and 0.934 (community sample) was found. Three subscales were identified (53.2 % of variance): Body environment experience (alpha = 0.875), Illness perception and distress (alpha = 0.864), Physical symptoms (alpha = 0.674). Adequate test–retest reliability has been confirmed (ICC: 0.78 for the overall score). ORWELL-R scores were worse in the clinical sample. Worst HRQoL, as measured by higher ORWELL-R scores, was associated with BMI increases. ORWELL-R scores were associated with IWQOL-Lite and lower scores in happiness. Conclusions: ORWELL-R shows good internal consistency and adequate test–retest reliability. Good construct validity was also observed (for convergent and discriminant validity) and confirmed through confirmatory factor analysis (in both clinical and community samples). Presented data sustain ORWELL-R as a reliable and useful instrument to assess obesity-related QoL, in both research and clinical contexts.
KW - Health-related quality of life
KW - ORWELL-R
KW - Obesity
KW - Validation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84971265074&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s40519-015-0222-z
DO - 10.1007/s40519-015-0222-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 26429794
AN - SCOPUS:84971265074
SN - 1124-4909
VL - 21
SP - 277
EP - 288
JO - Eating and Weight Disorders
JF - Eating and Weight Disorders
IS - 2
ER -