Health-related quality of life in Welsh adults: psychometric properties of the SF-36v2 and normative data

H. Alzahrani*, Y. S. Alshehri, Barbara Barcaccia, M. A. Alshehri, M. Alzhrani, J. B. Bjorner

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Objectives: The use of normative data has become well-accepted and a common strategy to interpret individual's health outcome scores, which can help in making decisions. The objectives of this study were to obtain population normative data for the domains and component summaries of the 36-item SF-36® Health Survey (SF-36), and to evaluate its reliability and construct validity. Methods: This study was conducted using population-based data from the Welsh Health Survey (WHS; 2011–2015). This study used version 2 of the SF-36 (SF-36v2® Health Survey). The descriptive statistics and normative data for the eight domains and two summaries, physical component summary (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS), were calculated. Reliability assessment used internal consistency methods and construct validity assessment used known group comparisons and item–scale correlations. Study design and sample: We performed a secondary analyses of data from the Welsh Health Survey (WHS). Results: This study included 74,578 participants aged 16 years or older (53.6% were women). Participants aged 16–24 years scored higher on SF-36 scale than older groups on all domains. The SF-36 profiles by age group demonstrated lower scores for older age groups, with the most pronounced differences shown on the physical-related scales. Across the age groups, men had higher PCS and MCS scores than women. All SF-36 domains and PCS and MCS achieved a good to excellent internal consistency reliability exceeding 0.7. The scales demonstrated construct validity by showing associations with a range of factors known to be related to health. Conclusions: This study provides SF-36 normative data for Wales based on a representative data and confirms the construct validity and reliability of the SF-36.

Original languageEnglish
JournalPublic Health
Volume214
Pages (from-to)153-162
Number of pages10
ISSN0033-3506
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Royal Society for Public Health

Keywords

  • Health
  • HRQoL
  • Normative
  • SF-36

Cite this