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Lishman Brain Injury Unit, Maudsley Hospital, Denmark Hill, London, SE5 8AZ (e-mail: s.fleminger{at}lop.kcl.ac.uk)
Lishman Brain Injury Unit, Maudsley Hospital, London
Grafton Manor, Towcester
Robert Ferguson Unit, Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Edinburgh
Kemsley Division, St Andrews Hospital, Northampton
Campbell Unit, Hospital Campus, Milton Keynes
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Abstract |
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The Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Acquired Brain Injury (HoNOSABI) is a relatively new outcome measure designed to assess the neuropsychiatric sequelae of brain damage. This study investigated the interrater reliability of this scale. Fifty patients with traumatic brain injury receiving rehabilitation were each rated twice on the HoNOSABI, by two different raters. There were 24 raters in total.
RESULTS
Weighted kappa values ranged from 0.43 to 0.84 and intraclass correlation coefficients from 0.58 to 0.97 for the ten items assessed.This indicated that agreement was moderate to substantial for all items.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
The scales consistently measured the items of interest across different raters. This indicates that HoNOSABI is a reliable outcome measure when applied by different raters in routine clinical practice.
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Introduction |
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Treatment includes pharmacological medication and rehabilitation. Rehabilitation is multifaceted (Rao & Lyketsos, 2000) and it is often difficult to determine which specific interventions are responsible for improvements in an individual. It is therefore necessary to have good outcome measures. Fleminger & Powell (1999) highlighted that most importantly, outcome measures need to be relevant to the patient and carer; they must also be trustworthy, and ideally used consistently across studies to facilitate comparison of treatment methods.
The Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS; Wing et al, 1998) were produced to provide an easily administered and reliable measure to be used in general adult mental health. Subsequent versions have been developed for more specialist settings. The Health of the Nation Outcome Scale for Acquired Brain Injury (HoNOSABI) for the assessment of individuals who have sustained a brain injury was developed by the UK Brain Injury Psychiatrists Group in conjunction with the Royal College of Psychiatrists Research Group, and has been available since 1999 (further details available from the author upon request).
Little work has been done to investigate the clinical relevance of HoNOSABI. Coetzer & Du Toit (2001) found promising correlations between the scale and three other outcome measures, including post-injury employment status. These findings indicate that the HoNOSABI is valid and pertinent to patients, as it relates outcome to reintegration into the community. However, there is no published assessment of interrater reliability for HoNOSABI, an index Portney & Watkins have argued is especially important when measuring devices are new (Portney & Watkins, 1993, p. 60). Our study therefore investigated the interrater reliability of this measure.
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Method |
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Participants
The 50 in-patients ranged in age from 18 years to 65 years. All had
disabling neuropsychiatric sequelae following severe traumatic brain injury
requiring in-patient rehabilitation.
Design and materials
Every patient was assessed independently by two raters. Each pair of raters
saw only a sample of the study participants. The assessments were made
separately by the two raters in the course of routine clinical practice and
were not conducted through an interview process. The raters were well
acquainted with the patients they assessed, who were all residents of the
in-patient units.
The HoNOSABI consists of 12 items, each reflecting a different domain of symptoms rated on a five-point scale (with 0 indicating no problem). Items 11 and 12 are designed for patients in community settings and were therefore excluded from the analysis. Item 3 relates to problems associated with alcohol and drug use, which can be difficult to assess among in-patients (n=36 for this item). All analyses were performed on a personal computer using Microsoft Excel, the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 11.0 and Stata version 8.
Statistical analysis
The intraclass correlation provides an assessment of interrater reliability
by comparing the amount of variation between raters with the amount of
variation between individuals. A one-way random analysis of variance was used
to calculate the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) because each pair of
raters had not assessed all the participants. In order to take the closeness
of agreement between raters into account, weighted kappa values
(
w) were also calculated for each item
(Fig. 1). Significance tests
can identify whether raters show an agreement above chance or not. Values of
w are always lower than their corresponding ICC. To
interpret the degree of agreement, the guidelines provided by Landis &
Koch (1977) were used:
0.21-0.40 is seen as a fair level of agreement, 0.41-0.60 as moderate,
0.61-0.80 as substantial and >0.81 as almost perfect. Although these
divisions are arbitrary, they do provide useful benchmarks
(Landis & Koch, 1977,
p.165).
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Results |
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Table 2 shows the
w and ICC values and their confidence intervals for each
item. The interrater reliability ranges from 0.43 to 0.84 for
w and 0.58 to 0.97 for ICC. Calculation of test statistics
for
w(z=
w/standard error) indicated that,
for all items, the level of agreement between the pairs of raters was
significantly greater than chance (P<0.001), which was also supported by
the finding that the confidence intervals for both
w and ICC
values did not include zero. The level of agreement was highest for the item
relating to drug or alcohol problems (
w=0.82, ICC=0.97). The
lowest interrater reliability was for the item corresponding to depressive
symptoms (
w=0.43), whereas the lowest reliability for the
ICC values was for the item relating to other symptoms (0.58). All values
showed at least moderate agreement (Landis
& Koch, 1977).
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Discussion |
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w values and the
finding that none of the confidence intervals for
w or ICCs
contained zero indicated that the level of agreement between the pairs of
raters was significantly greater than chance for all items of the
HoNOSABI assessed. The interrater reliability of the item relating to
problems with drugs or alcohol was 0.84, which may be spuriously high owing to
the smaller sample size used, but is more likely to be due to the lack of
access to drugs in rehabilitation settings and the concrete nature of the
question. The lowest
w value was for the depressive symptoms
item, indicating that it is more difficult to rate this item consistently. The
ICC was lowest for the item assessing other mental and behavioural problems,
with a wide confidence interval of 0.38. This item is disparate in nature and
might be more clinically useful if viewed qualitatively. Interrater
reliability values for the other items were all similar and showed at least
moderate agreement.
Rater training
It is possible that differences in raters interpretation of the
items, rather than their assessment of the patients, led to lower reliability.
Brooks (2000) examined the
efficacy of staff training on the reliability of the generic HoNOS and
concluded that although reasonable improvements could be gained
(p. 509), staff training could also be of no value (p. 609). The
findings are clearly inconclusive, although training could increase the
reliability of the scales.
Neuropsychiatric sequelae
Overall, the participants were rated as having particular problems within
the domains of cognitive functioning, relationships and activities in daily
life, in line with the findings of Coetzer & Du Toit
(2001). In contrast, Orrell
et al (1999)
investigated scores on the generic HoNOS among a population of psychiatric
patients and found that the patients were rated as having more problems with
depressed mood, other mental health problems and relationships. In this
investigation, participants were rated as having more severe problems on most
items (mean scores 0.21-3.04) compared with those assessed in the study by
Orrell and colleagues (mean scores 0.24-1.64;
Orrell et al, 1999).
The findings reported here and by Coetzer & Du Toit
(2001) support the proposal
that individuals who have sustained a brain injury tend to present with
particular difficulties in cognition which then affect their general
psychosocial functioning and ability to perform activities of daily living
(Ponsford et al,
1995).
Potential criticisms
The generalisability of the study is limited; all the participants were
in-patients on neuropsychiatric brain injury units with moderate to severe
cognitive, behavioural and/or neuropsychiatric problems resulting from
traumatic brain injury. Reliability will be higher because all raters had the
opportunity to observe and discuss the patients in some detail. Raters did not
have to rely on taking a history from the patient or an informant to rate the
patient, as they would probably need to do in an out-patient or community
setting. On the other hand, we used data from several sites and the ratings
were made during the course of routine clinical care without specific
training.
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Implications of the study |
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References |
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COETZER, R. & DU TOIT, P. L. (2001)
HoNOSABI; a clinically useful outcome measure? Psychiatric
Bulletin, 25, 421
-422.
FLEMINGER, S. & POWELL, J. (1999) Evaluation of outcomes in brain injury rehabilitation. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 9, 225 -230.
LANDIS, J. R. & KOCH, G. G. (1977) The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. Biometrics, 33, 159 -174.[CrossRef][Medline]
LISHMAN, W. A. (1998) Head injury. In Organic Psychiatry:The Psychological Consequences of Cerebral Disorder (3rd edn), pp. 161-217. Oxford: Blackwell.
ORRELL, M., YARD, P., HANDYSIDES, J., et al
(1999) Validity and reliability of the Health of the Nation
Outcome Scales in psychiatric patients in the community. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 174, 409
-412.
PONSFORD, J., SLOAN, S. & SNOW, P. (1995) Traumatic Brain Injury: Rehabilitation for Everyday Adaptive Living. Hove: Erlbaum.
PORTNEY, L. G. & WATKINS, M. P. (1993) Foundations of Clinical Research: Applications to Practice. Stamford, Ct: Appleton & Lange.
RAO, V. & LYKETSOS, C. (2000) Neuropsychiatric
sequelae of traumatic brain injury. Psychosomatics,
41, 95-103.
WING, J. K., BEEVOR, A. S., CURTIS, R. H., et al
(1998) Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS): research and
development. British Journal of Psychiatry,
172, 11-18.
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