Copyright © 2005 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved.
The Refractive Status and Vision Profile: Evaluation of psychometric properties and comparison of Rasch and summated Likert-scaling
Received 24 March 2005;
References and further reading may be available for this article. To view references and further reading you must purchase this article.
Abstract
The psychometric properties of the Refractive Status and Vision Profile (RSVP) questionnaire were evaluated using Rasch analysis. Ninety-one myopic patients from a refractive surgery clinic and general optometric practice completed the RSVP. Rasch analysis of the RSVP ordinal data was performed to examine for unidimensionality and item reduction. The traditional Likert-scoring system was compared with a Rasch-scored RSVP and a reduced item Rasch-scored RSVP. Rasch analysis of the original RSVP showed poor targeting of item difficulty to patient quality of life, items with a ceiling effect and underutilized response categories. Combining the underutilized response scales and removal of redundant and misfitting items improved the internal consistency and targeting of the RSVP, and the reduced 20-item Rasch scored RSVP showed greater relative precision over standard Likert scoring in discriminating between the two subject groups. A Rasch scaled quality of life questionnaire is recommended for use in refractive outcomes research.
Keywords: Rasch analysis; Quality of life; Validity; Psychometric analysis; Questionnaire
Article Outline
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methods
- 2.1. Study sample
- 2.2. Instrument
- 2.3. Data analysis
- 3. Results
- 3.1. Descriptive statistics
- 3.2. Rasch analysis
- 3.3. Response scale reduction
- 3.4. Item reduction
- 3.5. Relative precision
- 4. Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References






E-mail Article
Add to my Quick Links

Cited By in Scopus (14)






and r-bar for the original RSVP validation and the three Rasch scaled versions