Bernd Schucher
Research interests
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InterestsMechanical Ventilation
Publications
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2.96Impact points
The Severe Respiratory Insufficiency (SRI) Questionnaire: a specific measure of health-related quality of life in patients receiving home mechanical ventilation.
Journal of clinical epidemiology. 08/2003; 56(8):752-9.
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to develop a specific instrument for measuring health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients receiving home mechanical ventilation (HMV). METHODS: The Severe Respiratory Insufficiency (SRI) Questionnaire was developed and tested for its p... [more] BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to develop a specific instrument for measuring health-related quality of life (HRQL) in patients receiving home mechanical ventilation (HMV). METHODS: The Severe Respiratory Insufficiency (SRI) Questionnaire was developed and tested for its psychometric properties following a multicentric clinical trial including 226 patients receiving HMV (mean age 57.3+/-14.0 years). RESULTS: Forty-nine items passed the selection process and were allocated to seven subscales: Respiratory Complaints, Physical Functioning, Attendant Symptoms and Sleep, Social Relationships, Anxiety, Psychologic Well-Being, and Social Functioning. Cronbach's alpha was >0.7 in all subscales and >0.8 in four subscales indicating high internal consistency reliability. Construct validity was confirmed by factor analysis, indicating one summary scale that accounts for 59.8% of the variance. Concurrent validity was confirmed by correlating subscales of the SRI and the SF-36 (0.21<r<0.79). Item-scale correlations revealed a high item discriminant validity. In addition, different diagnostic groups could be discriminated by the SRI. Here, the overall best HRQL was measured in the following order: patients with kyphoscoliosis, miscellaneous disorders, neuromuscular diseases, post-tuberculosis, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (P<.05). CONCLUSION: The SRI is a new multidimensional instrument with high psychometric properties designed to measure specific HRQL in patients with SRI receiving HMV.
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5.17Impact points
Evaluation of health-related quality of life using the MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Status Survey in patients receiving noninvasive positive pressure ventilation.
Intensive care medicine. 05/2003; 29(4):615-21.
OBJECTIVE: To collect benchmark data on the MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Status Survey (SF-36) in patients receiving noninvasive positive pressure ventilation and to examine whether health-related quality of life is influenced by the underlying disease or by physical parameters. DESIGN AND SETTING:... [more] OBJECTIVE: To collect benchmark data on the MOS 36-Item Short-Form Health Status Survey (SF-36) in patients receiving noninvasive positive pressure ventilation and to examine whether health-related quality of life is influenced by the underlying disease or by physical parameters. DESIGN AND SETTING: Multicentric clinical cross-sectional trial in four general wards specialized in noninvasive positive pressure ventilation. PATIENTS AND PARTICIPANTS: 226 patients (78 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 57 kyphoscoliosis, 20 posttuberculosis sequelae, 17 Duchenne muscular dystrophy, 13 polyneuropathy, 13 myopathy, 6 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, 12 obesity-hypoventilation syndrome, 4 poliomyelitis sequelae, 3 phrenic nerve lesion, 3 central hypoventilation syndrome) who used noninvasive positive pressure ventilation for home mechanical ventilation. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Health-related quality of life as assessed by the SF-36 was lower than in the general population. Overall the Physical Component Summary (PCS) was significantly lower than the general population norm; the Mental Component Summary (MCS) was also reduced but less markedly. Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease were more impaired in MCS than those with kyphoscoliosis. PCS was significantly associated with age. Gender, lung function, and arterial blood gas values were not significant predictors of health-related quality of life. CONCLUSIONS: Benchmark SF-36 data in patients receiving noninvasive positive pressure ventilation are given. Although physical health is significantly impaired in these patients, this does not necessarily lead to mental limitation, and mental health is influenced by the underlying disease, but not by physical parameters.
Following (12)
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David Pittrow
Technical University -
Hicham Benkhai
Ernst-Moritz-Arndt-Universität Greifswald -
Andreas Rose
Biogents AG -
Soenke Bartling
German Cancer Research Center / UMC Mannheim