Development of the MobQoL patient reported outcome measure for mobility-related quality of life

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Development of the MobQoL patient reported outcome measure for mobility-related quality of life. / Bray, Nathan; Spencer, Llinos; Tuersley, Lorna et al.
In: Disability and Rehabilitation, Vol. 43, No. 23, 06.11.2021, p. 3395-3404.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Bray N, Spencer L, Tuersley L, Edwards RT. Development of the MobQoL patient reported outcome measure for mobility-related quality of life. Disability and Rehabilitation. 2021 Nov 6;43(23):3395-3404. Epub 2020 Mar 24. doi: 10.1080/09638288.2020.1741701

Author

Bray, Nathan ; Spencer, Llinos ; Tuersley, Lorna et al. / Development of the MobQoL patient reported outcome measure for mobility-related quality of life. In: Disability and Rehabilitation. 2021 ; Vol. 43, No. 23. pp. 3395-3404.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Development of the MobQoL patient reported outcome measure for mobility-related quality of life

AU - Bray, Nathan

AU - Spencer, Llinos

AU - Tuersley, Lorna

AU - Edwards, Rhiannon Tudor

PY - 2021/11/6

Y1 - 2021/11/6

N2 - AbstractPurpose: To examine how mobility and mobility impairment affect quality of life; to develop a descriptive system (i.e., questions and answers) for a novel mobility-related quality of life outcome measure.Materials and methods: Data were collected through semi-structured interviews. Participants were recruited predominantly from NHS posture and mobility services. Qualitative framework analysis was used to analyse data. In the first stage of analysis the key dimensions of mobility-related quality of life were defined, and in the second stage a novel descriptive system was developed from the identified dimensions.Results: Forty-six interviews were conducted with 37 participants (aged 20–94 years). Participants had a wide range of conditions and disabilities which impaired their mobility, including cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis. Eleven dimensions of mobility-related quality of life were identified: accessibility, safety, relationships, social inclusion, participation, personal care, pain and discomfort, independence, energy, self-esteem, and mental-wellbeing. A new outcome measure, known as MobQoL, was developed.Conclusions: Mobility and mobility impairment can have significant impacts on quality of life. MobQoL is the first outcome measure designed specifically to measure the impact of mobility on quality of life, and therefore has utility in research and practice to measure patient outcomes related to rehabilitation.Implications for RehabilitationMobility impairment affects many different aspects of health and quality of life.The impact of mobility impairment on quality of life is related to processes of physical, emotional, and behavioural adaptation.MobQoL is the first patient-reported outcome measure designed specifically to measure the quality of life impacts of mobility impairment and assistive mobility technology use.MobQoL has potential to be used by rehabilitation professionals to measure and monitor mobility-related quality of life as part of routine clinical practice.

AB - AbstractPurpose: To examine how mobility and mobility impairment affect quality of life; to develop a descriptive system (i.e., questions and answers) for a novel mobility-related quality of life outcome measure.Materials and methods: Data were collected through semi-structured interviews. Participants were recruited predominantly from NHS posture and mobility services. Qualitative framework analysis was used to analyse data. In the first stage of analysis the key dimensions of mobility-related quality of life were defined, and in the second stage a novel descriptive system was developed from the identified dimensions.Results: Forty-six interviews were conducted with 37 participants (aged 20–94 years). Participants had a wide range of conditions and disabilities which impaired their mobility, including cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, and arthritis. Eleven dimensions of mobility-related quality of life were identified: accessibility, safety, relationships, social inclusion, participation, personal care, pain and discomfort, independence, energy, self-esteem, and mental-wellbeing. A new outcome measure, known as MobQoL, was developed.Conclusions: Mobility and mobility impairment can have significant impacts on quality of life. MobQoL is the first outcome measure designed specifically to measure the impact of mobility on quality of life, and therefore has utility in research and practice to measure patient outcomes related to rehabilitation.Implications for RehabilitationMobility impairment affects many different aspects of health and quality of life.The impact of mobility impairment on quality of life is related to processes of physical, emotional, and behavioural adaptation.MobQoL is the first patient-reported outcome measure designed specifically to measure the quality of life impacts of mobility impairment and assistive mobility technology use.MobQoL has potential to be used by rehabilitation professionals to measure and monitor mobility-related quality of life as part of routine clinical practice.

KW - Disability

KW - QALY

KW - health-related quality of life

KW - mobility impairment

KW - patient reported outcomes

KW - preference based measure

KW - qualitative

KW - quality of life

U2 - 10.1080/09638288.2020.1741701

DO - 10.1080/09638288.2020.1741701

M3 - Article

VL - 43

SP - 3395

EP - 3404

JO - Disability and Rehabilitation

JF - Disability and Rehabilitation

SN - 0963-8288

IS - 23

ER -