Multilevel Interventions: Measurement and Measures
Open Access
- 1 May 2012
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in JNCI Monographs
- Vol. 2012 (44) , 67-77
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgs011
Abstract
Multilevel intervention research holds the promise of more accurately representing real-life situations and, thus, with proper research design and measurement approaches, facilitating effective and efficient resolution of health-care system challenges. However, taking a multilevel approach to cancer care interventions creates both measurement challenges and opportunities. One-thousand seventy two cancer care articles from 2005 to 2010 were reviewed to examine the state of measurement in the multilevel intervention cancer care literature. Ultimately, 234 multilevel articles, 40 involving cancer care interventions, were identified. Additionally, literature from health services, social psychology, and organizational behavior was reviewed to identify measures that might be useful in multilevel intervention research. The vast majority of measures used in multilevel cancer intervention studies were individual level measures. Group-, organization-, and community-level measures were rarely used. Discussion of the independence, validity, and reliability of measures was scant. Measurement issues may be especially complex when conducting multilevel intervention research. Measurement considerations that are associated with multilevel intervention research include those related to independence, reliability, validity, sample size, and power. Furthermore, multilevel intervention research requires identification of key constructs and measures by level and consideration of interactions within and across levels. Thus, multilevel intervention research benefits from thoughtful theory-driven planning and design, an interdisciplinary approach, and mixed methods measurement and analysis.Keywords
This publication has 111 references indexed in Scilit:
- State-of-the-Art and Future Directions in Multilevel Interventions Across the Cancer Control ContinuumJNCI Monographs, 2012
- The Relationship between Organizational Climate and Quality of Chronic Disease ManagementHealth Services Research, 2011
- A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Multilevel Intervention to Increase Colorectal Cancer Screening among Latino Immigrants in a Primary Care FacilityJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2010
- Effectiveness of a patient‐ and practice‐level colorectal cancer screening intervention in health plan membersCancer, 2010
- Cancer treatment adherence among low‐income women with breast or gynecologic cancerCancer, 2009
- A multilevel intervention to promote colorectal cancer screening among community health center patients: results of a pilot studyBMC Family Practice, 2009
- Organizational Determinants of Hospital End-of-Life Treatment IntensityMedical Care, 2009
- Increasing Patient/Physician Communications About Colorectal Cancer Screening in Rural Primary Care PracticesMedical Care, 2008
- Improving Colorectal Cancer Screening Among the Medically Underserved: A Pilot Study within a Federally Qualified Health CenterJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2007
- Primary Care Practice Organization Influences Colorectal Cancer Screening PerformanceHealth Services Research, 2006