There is a newer version of the record available.

Published November 2024 | Version v3
Working paper Open

Evaluating Health-related Quality of Life (HRQoL) Scales for Rare Diseases from a Quality of Life (QoL) Perspective

Description

Abstract
Although rare diseases concern a small fragment of the population, they collectively affect
about 4% of the general population. The well-being of patients with rare diseases has long
been overlooked, but several scales now measure their health-related quality of life
(HRQoL), enabling targeted cures and interventions. However, not all scales are equally
efficient at measuring key aspects of quality of life of patients. In the present study, we
evaluate health related quality of life (HRQoL) scales for rare diseases from the perspective
of the social science-driven field of quality of life (QOL). Using the method of Booysen to
evaluate social indicators, we review eleven scales frequently used in the case of rare
diseases (CFQ, CFQoL, DLQI, MOS, PLC, QLI, SF-12, SF-36, SIP, Skindex, TAAQOL) and map
what is measured and what is not. Key findings are that scales are overly focused on outputbased specific indicators, lack flexibility, and miss a holistic view of quality of life. We
suggest improvements such as incorporating more generic items, including input
indicators, targeting general well-being, and involving patients in the development of
questions.
Keywords: Rare diseases, HRQoL, QOL, well-being, scales, evaluation

Files

Working Paper No. 8_Evaluating Health-related Quality of Life HRQoL Scales for Rare Diseases from a Quality of Life QoL Perspective by Gael Brule, Maria Caiata Zufferey, Agnes Du - Copy.pdf

Additional details