Determining the effectiveness of schizophrenia treatments requires aggregate measures that reflect the relative importance of schizophrenia's multiple outcome domains. A lack of understanding of the relative importance of various domains prevents meaningful aggregation of outcome measures and limits inferences drawn from treatment research. This study is designed to develop and apply methods for determining the importance of schizophrenia treatment outcomes by adapting preference assessment methods used in general health status research. The first of two study phases is devoted to method development. Four preference assessment methods (category rating, time trade-off, paired comparison and direct importance rating) used successfully in prior health status research will be evaluated in two expert groups, one comprised of clinicians providing schizophrenia treatment and one of persons with schizophrenia. In the second phase, the two preference assessment methods found to be most feasible, valid and reliable in the method development phase will be compared in a randomized, factorial design including 4 stakeholder groups directly and indirectly involved in schizophrenia treatment (persons with schizophrenia, clinicians providing schizophrenia treatment, family members of persons with schizophrenia and members of the general public). This method and group comparison will (1) determine which methods perform comparably across stakeholder groups in terms of feasibility, validity, reliability and efficiency, (2) determine whether stakeholder group membership or other demographic characteristics affect preferences for treatment outcomes, (3) identify methods best suited for use in future studies of schizophrenia treatment outcome, (4) generate preference weights for key outcomes which can be applied retrospectively to existing research findings as well as in future studies where preference assessment is not practical. Study findings will also inform the study of other serious mental disorders and help to resolve prevailing controversies about the importance of method and stakeholder group differences in health status preference assessment.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01MH051555-02
Application #
2250800
Study Section
Services Research Review Committee (SER)
Project Start
1994-05-01
Project End
1997-04-30
Budget Start
1995-07-01
Budget End
1996-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
073133571
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94143
Shumway, Martha; Chouljian, Tandy L; Battle, Cynthia L (2005) Measuring preferences for schizophrenia outcomes with the time tradeoff method. J Behav Health Serv Res 32:14-26
Shumway, Martha; Sentell, Tetine; Chouljian, Tandy et al. (2003) Assessing preferences for schizophrenia outcomes: comprehension and decision strategies in three assessment methods. Ment Health Serv Res 5:121-35
Shumway, Martha; Chouljian, Tandy L; Rozewicz, Francine (2003) Paraphrase procedures for assessing comprehension of health outcome measures: an illustration from schizophrenia research. Eval Health Prof 26:73-85
Shumway, Martha (2003) Preference weights for cost-outcome analyses of schizophrenia treatments: comparison of four stakeholder groups. Schizophr Bull 29:257-66