P242 Development and psychometric testing of an inflammatory bowel disease fatigue (IBD-F) patient self-assessment scale (original) (raw)

Development and psychometric testing of inflammatory bowel disease fatigue (IBD-F) patient self-assessment scale

Journal of Crohn's and Colitis, 2014

Background and aims: Fatigue is one of the main symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and is frequently reported by people in both active and quiescent disease. Many different fatigue assessment scales have been used to measure fatigue, but none has been developed or tested in IBD. This study aimed to develop a fatigue scale specific to the needs and experiences of people with IBD. Methods: A five-step sequential mixed method design was used: a qualitative phase to assess patients' experience of fatigue and its impact on their lives, and four mixed qualitativequantitative phases to refine the scale and to assess its psychometric properties. Results: 567 people participated in five phases. The resulting questionnaire has 3 sections: 5 questions assessing frequency and severity of fatigue; 30 questions rating the experience and impact of fatigue; and a free-text section asking for patients' comments and additional issues related to fatigue. Initial validation suggests that the questionnaire has good face and content validity, acceptable to excellent test-retest stability (ICC 0.74 for Section 1 and 0.83 for Section 2) and a high degree of internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha N 0.9). Conclusions: Participants in the study confirmed that fatigue in IBD is burdensome. Items generated and refined by people with IBD-fatigue reflect their experience and form the basis of

Questionnaires for measuring fatigue and its impact on health perception in inflammatory bowel disease

Revista Española de Enfermedades Digestivas, 2013

Introduction: fatigue impacts perceived health, but its importance in inflammatory bowel disease is not known. Objectives: to define the applicability of the fatigue measurement questionnaires and analyze it in patients with Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. Material and methods: in a first phase, the psychometric properties of 3 fatigue measurement questionnaires were determined in 99 patients: Daily Fatigue Impact Scale, Fatigue Severity Scale, and Modified Fatigue Impact Scale. In a second phase, fatigue status and its relationship to disease and quality of life was determined in 127 patients and 69 healthy controls. Results: the first part of the study showed the applicability of the questionnaires listed in inflammatory bowel disease, the Daily Fatigue Impact Scale (DFIS) having the best correlation with the quality of life and clinical activity. In the second phase, significantly higher levels of fatigue were observed in active disease than in disease in remission and healthy controls (p < 0,05). The severity of fatigue was significantly correlated with quality of life (r =-0.66 and-0.72 between IBDQ-9 and DFIS and in Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, respectively) and with disease activity (r = 0.25 and Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, respectively, p < 0.05). Conclusions: in inflammatory bowel disease, fatigue measurement questionnaires have good properties and show that fatigue is an important manifestation of the disease, which has a significant impact on quality of life of patients.

The experience of fatigue in people with inflammatory bowel disease: an exploratory study

Journal of Advanced Nursing, 2012

Aims. To explore fatigue, the impact it has on daily life and the strategies used to ameliorate the symptom, as described by people with inflammatory bowel disease. Background. Fatigue is the most troublesome symptom during remission of inflammatory bowel disease. Fatigue affects people's daily functioning, impacting on quality of life. There is limited understanding of the nature of and the ways fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease is experienced and managed in everyday adult life. Design. An epistemological interpretive approach to understand participants' selfreported experiences of disease-related fatigue. Methods. A convenience sample of 46 participants was recruited from the Crohn's and Colitis UK member database. Five focus group interviews (November 2008-February 2009) were conducted, audio-recorded, transcribed, and analysed using an inductive thematic framework. Findings. Five themes were identified: the experience of fatigue, causes of fatigue, managing fatigue, consequences of fatigue, and seeking support. Fatigue had a debilitating effect on the social and emotional well-being of participants and limited their employment opportunities. People used a range of strategies to cope and reported that fatigue-related issues seemed to be poorly understood by clinicians and were not addressed in medical consultations. Conclusion. Fatigue was an inextricable part of daily life for some people with inflammatory bowel disease. Specialist nurses and medical colleagues need to address the personal, social, and economic consequences of fatigue, whilst further nursing research would improve understanding of the impact of fatigue and help develop appropriate intervention strategies for people with inflammatory bowel disease.

The Inflammatory Bowel Disease-Fatigue Patient Self-Assessment Scale: Translation, Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Psychometric Properties of the Brazilian Version (Ibd-F Brazil)

Arquivos de Gastroenterologia

BACKGROUND: Fatigue is a common symptom in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). A translated and culturally adapted, instrument with robust psychometric for measuring fatigue in Brazilian patients with IBD is needed. OBJECTIVE: To translate and cross-culturally adapt the inflammatory Bowel Disease Fatigue Scale (IBD-F) into Brazilian-Portuguese and to test its measurement properties in Brazilian patients with IBD. METHODS: Data from 123 patients with IBD were collected. In addition to IBD-F, the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue (FACIT-F) was used. The measurement properties tested were: internal consistency, reproducibility (reliability and agreement), construct validity, internal and external responsiveness, and ceiling and floor effects. RESULTS: The Brazilian-Portuguese version of the IBD-F showed excellent internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha of 0.95), excellent reproducibility (ICC=0.97) and a minimal detectable change of 6.0 points. The co...

Fatigue in Patients with Newly Diagnosed Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Results from a Prospective Inception Cohort, the IBSEN III Study

Journal of Crohn's and Colitis

Background and Aims Although fatigue is common in inflammatory bowel disease [IBD], its pathogenesis remains unclear. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of fatigue and its associated factors in a cohort of patients newly diagnosed with IBD. Methods Patients ≥18 years old were recruited from the Inflammatory Bowel Disease South-Eastern Norway [IBSEN III] study, a population-based, observational inception cohort. Fatigue was assessed using the Fatigue Questionnaire and compared with data from a Norwegian general population. Univariate and multivariate linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to evaluate the associations of total fatigue [TF; continuous score] and substantial fatigue [SF; dichotomized score ≥4] with sociodemographic, clinical, endoscopic, laboratory, and other relevant patient data. Results In total, 983/1509 [65.1%] patients with complete fatigue data were included (ulcerative colitis [UC], 68.2%; Crohn’s disease [CD], 31.8%). The prevalence of...

Fatigue in a population-based cohort of patients with inflammatory bowel disease 20 years after diagnosis: The IBSEN study

Scandinavian journal of gastroenterology, 2017

Fatigue is a major concern for patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), but evidence from population-based studies regarding fatigue in long-standing inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) patients is scarce. Our aims were to assess fatigue scores and the prevalence of chronic fatigue in IBD patients 20 years after diagnosis and to identify variables associated with fatigue in this cohort. Twenty years after diagnosis, patients from a cohort with incident IBD were invited to a follow-up visit that included a structured interview, a clinical examination, laboratory tests and the Fatigue Questionnaire (FQ). Fatigue scores were obtained, and factors associated with fatigue were assessed via linear and logistic regression analyses. Of the 599 invited patients, 440 (73.5%) completed the FQ. Among those with active disease, we found significantly higher fatigue scores than among those with quiescent disease (fatigue scores: UC 17.1 versus 12.4, p < .001, and CD 17....

The impact of Inflammatory Bowel Disease related fatigue on Health-Related Quality of Life: a qualitative semi-structured interview study

Journal of Research in Nursing

BackgroundFatigue is a frequently reported symptom of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), having a negative impact on Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). Patients’ experiences of this have not been researched in IBD.MethodsSemi-structured interviews were conducted with adults with Crohn’s Disease from out-patient clinics in the United Kingdom. Interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed verbatim, then analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsFourteen participant interviews were conducted. Three key themes were identified: 1) ‘The new normal’ established through adaptation and acceptance; 2) ‘Energy as a resource’ describing attempts to better manage fatigue through planning and prioritising tasks; 3) ‘Keeping healthy’ encompasses participants’ beliefs that ‘good health’ allows better management of fatigue.ConclusionParticipants establish a ‘new’ normality, through maintaining the same or similar level of employment/education activities. However, this is often at the expense of s...

The experience of fatigue in people with inflammatory bowel disease: an exploratory study J A N JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING

Aims. To explore fatigue, the impact it has on daily life and the strategies used to ameliorate the symptom, as described by people with inflammatory bowel disease. Background. Fatigue is the most troublesome symptom during remission of inflammatory bowel disease. Fatigue affects people's daily functioning, impacting on quality of life. There is limited understanding of the nature of and the ways fatigue in inflammatory bowel disease is experienced and managed in everyday adult life. Design. An epistemological interpretive approach to understand participants' self-reported experiences of disease-related fatigue. Methods. A convenience sample of 46 participants was recruited from the Crohn's and Colitis UK member database. Five focus group interviews (November 2008–February 2009) were conducted, audio-recorded, transcribed, and analysed using an inductive thematic framework. Findings. Five themes were identified: the experience of fatigue, causes of fatigue, managing fatigue, consequences of fatigue, and seeking support. Fatigue had a debilitating effect on the social and emotional well-being of participants and limited their employment opportunities. People used a range of strategies to cope and reported that fatigue-related issues seemed to be poorly understood by clinicians and were not addressed in medical consultations. Conclusion. Fatigue was an inextricable part of daily life for some people with inflammatory bowel disease. Specialist nurses and medical colleagues need to address the personal, social, and economic consequences of fatigue, whilst further nursing research would improve understanding of the impact of fatigue and help develop appropriate intervention strategies for people with inflammatory bowel disease.