Translation and pilot validation of the Danish version of the Everyday Technology Use Questionnaire (ETUQ) – applied with older adults and adults living with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
Abstract
Introduction: The use of everyday technologies has grown rapidly during the last decades and has become an increasing part of people’s everyday life, and also now include the use of e-health technologies used on a daily... [ view full abstract ]
Introduction: The use of everyday technologies has grown rapidly during the last decades and has become an increasing part of people’s everyday life, and also now include the use of e-health technologies used on a daily basis for persons living with chronic health conditions, e.g., chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). There are however no validated assessments targeting the ability to use everyday- and e-health technologies for these people. The aim of this pilot study was to investigate the validity of the Danish version of the Everyday Technology Use Questionnaire (ETUQ) in a sample of older adults and adults with COPD.
Methods: The ETUQ was initially systematically translated according to a dual panel approach. 47 persons with and without COPD were then interviewed using the tool. A Rasch model was used to evaluate aspects of validity evidence in relation to response processes, internal scale validity and precision in measures.
Findings: After collapsing some scale step categories used in the ETUQ, a reduced number of items (n=40) demonstrated acceptable goodness-of-fit to the Rasch model. This reduced number of items demonstrated overall high unidimensionality, person response validity and precision in measures.
Conclusion: The findings from this pilot study support the use of ETUQ as a validated functional outcomes assessment in older adults and adults with COPD in Denmark.
Application to Practice: Everyday e-health items in the ETUQ support use of the tool to evaluate and predict the potential use of such health care approaches in praxis.
Authors
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Anders Kottorp
(University of Illinois at Chicago)
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Tina Helle
(University College of Northen Denmark)
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Rina Juel Kaptain
(University College of Northen Denmark)
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Lena Rosenberg
(Karolinska Instiutet)
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Louise Nygård
(Karolinska Institutet,)
Topic Areas
Europe 2020 targets and occupational therapy /science development , Horizon 2020 and occupational therapy / science research , Research methods , New and innovative intervention , ICT , Evidence based practice
Session
OS - 1D » Working with people with Chronic Illness (14:00 - Thursday, 16th June, D'Arcy Thompson Theatre)
Paper
COTEC_Validation_of_ETUQ.docx