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      Methods to Develop the Eye-tem Bank to Measure Ophthalmic Quality of Life.

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          Abstract

          There is an increasing demand for high-standard, comprehensive, and reliable patient-reported outcome (PRO) instruments in all the disciplines of health care including in ophthalmology and optometry. Over the past two decades, a plethora of PRO instruments have been developed to assess the impact of eye diseases and their treatments. Despite this large number of instruments, significant shortcomings exist for the measurement of ophthalmic quality of life (QoL). Most PRO instruments are short-form instruments designed for clinical use, but this limits their content coverage often poorly targeting any study population other than that which they were developed for. Also, existing instruments are static paper and pencil based and unable to be updated easily leading to outdated and irrelevant item content. Scores obtained from different PRO instruments may not be directly comparable. These shortcomings can be addressed using item banking implemented with computer-adaptive testing (CAT). Therefore, we designed a multicenter project (The Eye-tem Bank project) to develop and validate such PROs to enable comprehensive measurement of ophthalmic QoL in eye diseases.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Optom Vis Sci
          Optometry and vision science : official publication of the American Academy of Optometry
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          1538-9235
          1040-5488
          December 2016
          : 93
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] *PhD †PhD, FAAO Discipline of Optometry and Vision Science, Flinders University of South Australia, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia (JK, KP); and Centre for Eye Research Australia, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (EF, EL).
          Article
          10.1097/OPX.0000000000000992
          27668638
          010d80da-f58f-4c91-bb70-3217f0c942a5
          History

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