Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Health-related quality of life (EQ-5D-5L) |
Health-related quality of life will be measured using the EuroQol Five Dimensions (EQ-5D). The EQ-5D-5L is a valid extension of the 3-level questionnaire. It can be defined as a standardized non-disease specific value-based instrument to describe and value health-related quality of life. The instrument consists of two components: the EQ-5D descriptive system and the EQ visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS).The first part consists of five dimensions: mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. Each dimension has five response categories (no problems, slight problems, moderate problems, severe problems, and extreme problems), from which a single EQ-5D index score can be calculated ranging from 0 (dead) to 1 (perfect health). The EQ-VAS measures one's self-perceived health today on a vertical scale from 0 (worst imaginable health) to 100 (best imaginable health) on which participants have to indicate their current health. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Primary |
Self-perceived health status (SF-12) |
This study will use the 12-item Short Form Health Survey (SF-12) as a generic subjective or self-perceived health status instrument to assess patient's functional health and well-being whereas both physical and mental functioning components can be measured. This study makes use of the 12-item version instead of the 36-item version, because it can be completed in a shorter time. This instrument contains 12 items including eight domains (physical functioning, role-physical, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role-emotional, and mental health) which can be easily completed in five minutes. The summary scores, on a scale from 0 to 100, will be calculated to represent physical (Physical Component Summary score) and mental functioning (Mental Component Summary score). Higher scores indicate better self-perceived health status. The SF-12 has been confirmed as a valid and reliable instrument for measuring health perception in a general population for primary care. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Sense of coherence (SOC-13) |
Sense of coherence will be measured using the brief Antonovsky's Sense of Coherence Scale (SOC) which contains 13 items covering three dimensions: comprehensibility (the extent to which events are perceived as making sense, that they are ordered, consistent and structured), manageability (the extent to which a person feels he/she can cope), and meaningfulness (how much one feels that life makes sense and challenges are worthy of commitment). Responses are reported by a semantic scale ranging from one (never or very seldom) to seven points (very often). SOC scores range from 13 to 91, and a higher score indicates higher SOC. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Self-efficacy (GSES) |
General self-efficacy will be measured using the General Self-Efficacy Scale (GSES). The GSES is a 10-item psychometric scale that is designed to assess optimistic self-beliefs to cope with a variety of difficult demands in life. The total score is calculated by the sum of all items. Scores range between 10 and 40, with higher scores indicating more self-efficacy. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Health literacy (HLS-EU-Q6) |
The HLS-EU-Q6 will be used as a short scale of the European Health Literacy Survey (HLS-EU-Q). This tool consists of 6 items addressing self-reported difficulties in accessing, understanding, appraising and applying information in tasks concerning decision-making in health care, disease prevention, and health promotion. Responses are reported from one (very difficult) to four (very easy). The scale score varies between 1 and 4, with higher scores indicating better health literacy. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Patient enablement (PEI) |
The Patient Enablement Instrument (PEI) focuses on the impact of a clinical consultation for an acute or chronic disease in primary care on a patient's self-perceived ability to understand and cope with health issues and disease. It consists of six questions that reflect patient enablement. The responses are scored on a three-point scale (same or less/not applicable = 0, better/more = 1, and much better/much more = 2). The total PEI score ranges between 0 and 12 to indicate low (0-4), medium (score 5-9), and high enablement (10-12). |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Social support (F-SozU) |
Social support will be measured using the 6-item shortened version of the Social Support Questionnaire (F-SozU). This valid and reliable instrument is well accepted in epidemiologic contexts to assess social support in the general population. Responses are rated on a five-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 (does not apply) to 5 (exactly applicable). The total range is from 0 to 30 with higher values representing higher perceived and received social support. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Multimorbidity |
Multimorbidity will be measured by a self-developed list based on the MultiMorbidity Questionnaire (MM-21), and documents 24 self-reported chronic conditions in primary care. Participants have to indicate for each condition 'yes' or 'no', 'yes' may only be filled in for the conditions that have been confirmed by a doctor or for which the participant is taking prescribed drugs. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Symptoms (HADS) |
The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) is a 14-item brief self-reported instrument to determine possible presence of anxiety and depressive states. The HADS compromises two scales, each consisting of seven items. A maximum score of 21 can be achieved per scale. The higher the overall score, the higher levels of anxiety and depression. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|
Secondary |
Illness perception (IPQ-B) |
The brief Illness Perception Questionnaire (IPQ-B) will be used for assessing patients' cognitive and emotional representations of their illness including consequences, timeline, personal control, treatment control, identity, coherence, concern, emotional response, and causes. The questionnaire uses a scale from 0 to 10 to assess cognitive illness representations (IPQcognitive, item 1-5), emotional representations (IPQemotional, item 6 and 8), and illness comprehensibility (IPQcomprehensibility, item 7). A low score on items number 1,2,5,6 and 8 indicates that the illness is perceived as benign while a low score on the items 3, 4 and 7 indicates that the illness is perceived as threatening. By reversing these three items it is possible to compute an overall score. A higher score reflects a more threatening view of the illness. |
Measured at one time point (inclusion) |
|