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Measuring quality of life and treatment satisfaction in dogs

By Gildea, Edwina et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Zoetis International·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Development and validation of a quality of life and treatment satisfaction measure in canine osteoarthritis.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A study developed a new questionnaire to help dog owners assess their pet's quality of life and treatment satisfaction for osteoarthritis (OA), a condition that causes pain and limits movement. The "Canine OA Quality of Life and Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire" (CaOA-QoL-TS) was created based on feedback from dog owners and showed strong reliability and validity. It helps measure how well dogs are doing and how satisfied owners are with their dog's treatment. The results indicated that the questionnaire could effectively track improvements in both the dog's and owner's quality of life after treatment for OA.

People also search for: dog osteoarthritis quality of life · treatment satisfaction for dog arthritis · how to help my dog with arthritis

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Canine osteoarthritis (OA) causes pain and mobility impairment. This can reduce dog quality of life (QoL), owner QoL and owners' satisfaction with, and adherence to, treatments. No existing canine OA-specific instrument assesses all three impacts. This study aimed to develop and psychometrically evaluate an owner-completed canine OA-specific measure of dog QoL, owner QoL and owner treatment satisfaction; the "Canine OA Quality of Life and Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire" (CaOA-QoL-TS). METHODS: The CaOA-QoL-TS was developed using a conceptual model derived from a meta-synthesis of published literature followed by cognitive interviews with ten owners of dogs with OA, to evaluate content validity. RESULTS: Based on interview findings, ten items were reworded, four removed, and two added; resulting in 26 items that all owners understood and considered relevant. The recall period and response options were well understood and appropriate to almost all owners. To evaluate its psychometric properties, the CaOA-QoL-TS (draft 26-item version) was administered, across six timepoints in a phase 4 field study, to owners of OA treated dogs, recruited from veterinary practices ( = 93). Inter-item correlations suggested items clustered into three distinct domains: Dog QoL, Owner QoL and Treatment Satisfaction, as hypothesized. Confirmatory factor analysis supported deletion of two items and calculation of the three domain scores, with acceptable model fit. The resulting 24-item CaOA-QoL-TS instrument demonstrated strong internal consistency and good to excellent test-retest reliability. Convergent validity was supported by moderate to strong correlations with concurrent measures. Known groups validity was supported by statistically significant differences between groups categorized by owner global impression of QoL. Ability to detect change was demonstrated through statistically significant improvements over time in Owner and Dog QoL, with larger within-group effect sizes reported for the mean of 'improved' dogs compared to the mean of 'stable' dogs. Only a small sample of dogs worsened throughout the study. Anchor-based analyses supported-0.9 and-1.0-point within-group responder definitions for dog and owner QoL domains, respectively. DISCUSSION: Findings support the content validity of the CaOA-QoL-TS in canine OA. The 24-item CaOA-QoL-TS is a reliable and valid instrument to measure owner and canine QoL and TS and is sensitive to improvements following OA treatment.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38764853/