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Design of a treatment satisfaction measure for patients undergoing varicose vein treatment: Venous Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (VenousTSQ)

Authors :
Charlie J Gilbride
Alison Wilson
Anita Bradley-Gilbride
Janet Bayfield
Kathleen Gibson
Manjit Gohel
Clare Bradley
Source :
British Journal of Surgery. 110:200-208
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

Background Established condition-specific patient-reported outcome measures for varicose veins are limited to the measurement of health status and function. A treatment satisfaction measure is needed to understand patient satisfaction with different treatment options. The aim of this study was to design a Venous Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (VenousTSQ) that would be ready for large-scale data collection and psychometric evaluation. Methods Relevant items were selected from the -TSQ Item Library and new items were designed where necessary. A draft VenousTSQ was prepared using the existing AneurysmTSQ as a template. Fifteen interviews were conducted from 4 days to 16 months after the procedure. The interviews were designed to elicit important sources of satisfaction or dissatisfaction before completion of draft questionnaires. The VenousTSQ drafts were modified between sets of interviews until no further changes were required. Results The final VenousTSQ consists of two questionnaires: VenousTSQ early (VenousTSQe) and VenousTSQ status (VenousTSQs). Items that need be asked only once are in the VenousTSQe, whereas those that can usefully be asked more than once are in the VenousTSQs. Of the 16 unique items forming the VenousTSQ, 12 were from the -TSQ Item Library. Only 1 of these 12 required significant modification. Conclusions The VenousTSQ represents a condition-specific psychological outcome measure for varicose veins, enabling patient satisfaction or dissatisfaction with such treatments to be measured. Large-scale data collection is under way to establish optimal scoring, quantitative validity, and reliability of the VenousTSQ.

Subjects

Subjects :
Surgery

Details

ISSN :
13652168 and 00071323
Volume :
110
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
British Journal of Surgery
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d6dd6e76405c85993131a92155f11d8