A Brief Questionnaire to Screen for Quality of Life in Epilepsy The QOLIE‐10
- 1 June 1996
- Vol. 37 (6) , 577-582
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1528-1157.1996.tb00612.x
Abstract
To evaluate a brief questionnaire to screen aspects of health-related quality of life for persons with epilepsy. A study of 304 adults with epilepsy was undertaken at 25 seizure clinics in the United States. It was used for derivation of a brief screening tool from a longer instrument (QOLIE-89). The 10-item questionnaire (QOLIE-10) covers general and epilepsy-specific domains, grouped into three factors: Epilepsy Effects (memory, physical effects, and mental effects of medication), Mental Health (energy, depression, overall quality of life), and Role Functioning (seizure worry, work, driving, social limits). Scale scores were significantly different among seizure groups (p = 0.003). The QOLIE-10 can be completed by a patient in several minutes and reviewed rapidly by the physician. This screening tool could provide potentially useful information for initial assessment or follow-up of problem areas that are not commonly evaluated during routine clinical visits with patients with epilepsy.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Clinical Course of Epilepsy and Its Psychosocial Correlates: Findings from a U.K. Community StudyEpilepsia, 1996
- Quality of life in breast cancer patients: The contribution of data to the care of patientsEuropean Journal Of Cancer, 1993
- Measuring the impact of epilepsy: the development of a novel scaleEpilepsy Research, 1993
- The initial development of a health-related quality of life model as an outcome measure in epilepsyEpilepsy Research, 1993
- The MOS 36-ltem Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36)Medical Care, 1992
- Epilepsy and the quality of everyday lifeSocial Science & Medicine, 1992
- Hospital Quality TrendsMedical Care, 1991
- The Functional Status of PatientsMedical Care, 1990
- A Quantitative Approach to Measuring the Social Effects of EpilepsyNeuroepidemiology, 1990
- Assessment of function in routine clinical practice: Description of the coop chart method and preliminary findingsJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1987