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139

Research • Statistic & Theory

Measurement and the Measurement of Change

Denise F. Polit, PhD, FAAN

978-1-4511-9449-4 • February 2015 • Softbound • 7” x 10” • 352 pp.

Ideal for graduate-level courses on measurement or research methods,

Measurement and the Measurement of Change:

A Primer for the

Health Professions provides a “gentle” introduction to an overview

of complex measurement content. While this primer assumes a basic

understanding of statistics and statistical inference, the statistical

content serves to enhance conceptual understanding rather than to

guide computations.

Drawing on measurement theory and approaches from a variety of

fields, including psychometrics and clinimetrics, this important work

provides unique information for health professionals who develop new

instruments, adapt existing ones, select instruments for use in clinical

trials or in clinical practice, interpret information from measurements

and changes in scores, or undertaking a systematic review on

instruments.

Features

A compelling multidisciplinary approach

draws from

psychometrics, clinimetrics, and other fields to help readers

understand measurement concepts.

Diverse examples of measures and classification systems

used

in medicine, public health, nursing, psychotherapy, epidemiology,

physical therapy, nutrition science, and other health fields, illustrate

key measurement concepts.

A glossary of key terms and a thorough index

support graduate-

level research methods students as well as practicing clinicians and

researchers.

Practical guidance

on measurement assists those who develop

new instruments, adapt existing ones, select instruments for use

in clinical trials or in clinical practice, interpret information from

measurements and changes in scores, or undertake a systematic

review on instruments.

Table of Contents

Part I:

Introduction

1. Basics of Measurement

2. Types of Measurement

3. Measurement Properties: An Overview

Part II:

Developing Multi-Item

Instruments

4. Challenges in Scale Development

5. Scale Development: Classical Test Theory

6. Scale Development: Item Response Theory

7. Developing Clinimetric Measures

Part III:

The Reliability Domain

8. Reliability: Test-Retest, Parallel Test,

Interrater, and Intrarater Reliability

9. Internal Consistency

10. Measurement Error

Part IV:

The Validity Domain

11. Content Validity and Face Validity

12. Criterion Validity

13. Construct Validity: Hypothesis Testing

14. Construct Validity: Structural Validity

15. Cross-Cultural Validity

16. Interpretation of Scores

PartV:

Change Scores and the

Responsiveness Domain

17. Change Scores and Their Reliability

18. Responsiveness

19. The Interpretation of Change Scores