Purpose
The CASP-19 is used to measured self-reported Quality of Life measure among adults aged 60 and older.
The CASP-19 is used to measured self-reported Quality of Life measure among adults aged 60 and older.
19
10 minutes
Adult
18 - 64
yearsElderly Adult
65 +
yearsJamien Cvjetnicanin, Andrea Horsfield, Caitlin Bernert, Megan Black
(Master of Occupational Therapy Students)
Faculty mentor: Danbi Lee, PhD, OTD, OTR/L
Division of Occupational Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle
The CASP-19 has been translated into 14 languages and used in 20 countries and 70 studies.
Scoring information is based on how the instrument was used in the English Longitudinal Survey of Ageing (ELSA). According to the publisher’s web site, this scoring method differs from the original paper, but is now the most commonly used method
Older Adults: (Nalathamby et al, 2017; n=446; Mean Age = 73.1 (6.8); Malaysian sample)
Older Adults: ( et al., 2018; n=132; Mean Age = 73.1 (8.1); Lithuanian sample)
Older Adults: (Miremadi et al., 2018, n=200; Elderly sample; Persian sample)
Early old age: (Hyde et al, 2003; n=286; Age = 65-75)
Older Adults: (Sim et al., 2011; n=264; Mean Age = 77.5; UK sample)
Early old age: (Oluboyede et al., 2013; n=7,732; Mean Age > 50)
Older Adults: (Wu et al., 2013; n=699; Mean Age = 75.5 (6.5); Taiwanese sample)
Early old age: (Kim et al., 2014; n=13,210, Mean Age across 3 countries: 61-64 years; Czech Republic, Russia, and Poland sample)
Older Adults: (Lima et al., 2014; n=87; Mean Age = 75.6 (0.7); Brazilian-Portuguese Sample)
Older Adults who are Overweight: (Jackson et al., 2015; n=5056, Mean Age = 67.49; English population)
Older Adults: (Nalathamby et al, 2017)
Older Adults: ( et al., 2018)
Early old age: (Neri et al., 2018; n=368; Age >55; Brazilian sample)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Concurrent validity:
Early old age: (Hyde et al, 2003)
Convergent Validity:
Early old age: (Hyde et al, 2003)
Older Adults: (Sim et al., 2011)
Convergent validity |
r Value |
Correlations |
Diener Satisfaction with Life Scale |
0.66 |
Excellent |
SF-12 Physical |
0.53 |
Adequate |
SF-12 Mental |
0.49 |
Adequate |
Early old age: (Kim et al., 2014)
Older Adults: (Nalathamby et al, 2017)
Older Adults: ( et al., 2018)
Convergent validity |
r Value |
Correlations |
EQ-5D index |
0.39 |
adequate |
EQ-5D: mobility |
-0.37 |
adequate |
EQ-5D: usual activities |
-0.36 |
adequate |
Older Adults: (Caliskan et al., 2019; n=168; Mean Age = 73.3 (5.9); Turkish sample)
Divergent Validity:
Older Adults: (Pereiro et al, 2015; n=643; Mean Age = 67.23 (11.02); Galician Spanish Sample)
Older Adults: ( et al., 2018; n=132; Mean Age = 73.1 (8.1); Lithuanian sample)
Divergent validity |
r Value |
Correlations |
EQ-5D: self-care |
-0.32 |
adequate |
EQ-5D: pain/discomfort |
-0.17 |
excellent |
EQ-5D: anxiety/depression |
-0.3 |
adequate |
Factor Analysis:
Early old age: (Sexton et al, 2013; n=6823; Mean Age = 63.6 (9.6); Irish sample)
Early old age: (Hyde et al, 2003; n=286; Age = 65-75).
A 23-item scale was developed and piloted with focus groups to determine content validity. This was also tested with individual cognitive interviews. Both groups reported that the questions were meaningful and easy to complete. They suggested removing one question, which left researchers with a 22-item scale.
Early old age: (Hyde et al, 2003; n=286; Age = 65-75)
Older Adults: (Wu et al., 2013; n=699; Mean Age = 75.5 (6.5); Taiwanese sample)
Early old age: (Sexton et al, 2013)
Older Adults: (Wu et al., 2013; n=699; Mean Age = 75.5 (6.5); Taiwanese sample)
Older Adults: ( et al., 2018; n=132; Mean Age = 73.1 (8.1); Lithuanian sample)
Older Adults: (Howel., 2012; n=6,482; Age %: 43% of participants 50-59, 32% of participants 60-69, 25% of participants 70+)
Early old age: (Oluboyede et al., 2013; n=7,732; Mean Age > 50)
Dementia: (Stoner et al., 2019; n=225; Mean Age=77.1 (9.4), time since diagnosis=73% less than 3 years; Alzheimer’s disease n=109; Vascular dementia n=40; Dementia of mixed aetiology n=47; Parkinson’s related dementia n=4; Other and unknown n=28)
Dementia: (Stoner et al., 2019)
Dementia: (Stoner et al., 2019)
Concurrent validity:
Dementia: (Stoner et al, 2019)
Convergent validity:
Dementia: (Stoner et al., 2019)
Dementia: (Stoner et al., 2019)
Adequate ceiling effect of 0.88% and excellent floor effect
Caliskan, H., Aycicek, G.S., Ozureckci, C., Dogrul, R.T., Baci, C., Sumer, F., Ozcan, M., Karabulut, E., Halil, M., Cankurtaran, M., & Yavuz, B.B. (2019). Turkish validation of a new scale from older people’s perspectives: Older people’s quality of life-brief (OPQOL-brief). Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 83, 91-95.
, A., Alekna, V., Tamulaitiene, M., & Stukas, R. (2018). Reliability and validity of the Lithuanian version of CASP-19: A quality of life questionnaire for the elderly. Medicina (Kaunas), 54(6), 103.
Howel, D. (2012). Interpreting and evaluating the CASP-19 quality of life measure in older people. Age and Ageing, 41(5), 612–617.
Hyde, M., Wiggins, R. D., Higgs, P., & Blane, D. B. (2003). A measure of quality of life in early old age: The theory, development and properties of a needs satisfaction model (CASP-19). Aging & Mental Health, 7(3), 186–194.
Jackson, S. E., Beeken, R. J., & Wardle, J. (2015). Obesity, perceived weight discrimination, and psychological well-being in older adults in England. Obesity, 23(5), 1105-1111.
Kim, G.R., Netuveli, G., Blane, D., Peasey, A., Malyutina, S., Simonova, G., Kubinova, R., Pajak, A., Croezen, S., Bobak, M., & Pikhart, H. (2015). Psychometric properties and confirmatory factor analysis of the CASP-19, a measure of quality of life in early old age: the HAPIEE study. Aging & Mental Health, 19(7), 595-609. https://doi.org/
Lima, F.M., Hyde, M., Chungkham, H.S., Correia, C., Siqueira-Campos, A., & Campos, M. (2014). Quality of life amongst older Brazilians: A cross-cultural validation of the CASP-19 into Brazilian-Portuguese. PLOS ONE, 9(4), 94289. https://doi-org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094289
Miremadi, M. (2018). Validation of the Persian version of Aging Perceptions Questionnaire (APQ). 笔ā测颈蝉丑, 17(2), 199-207.
Nalathamby, N., Morgan, K., Mat, S., Tan, P., Kamaruzzaman, S., & Tan, M. (2017). Validation of the CASP-19 quality of life measure in three languages in Malaysia. Journal of Tropical Psychology, 7(1), e4. https://doi.org/10.1017/jtp.2017.4
Neri, A. L., Borim, F., Batistoni, S., Cachioni, M., Rabelo, D. F., Fontes, A. P., & Yassuda, M. S. (2018). Nova valida??o sem?ntico-cultural estudo psicométrico da CASP-19 em adultos idosos brasileiros (New semantic-cultural validation and psychometric study of the CASP-19 scale in adult and elderly Brazilians). Cadernos de Saude Publica, 34(10), e00181417.
Oluboyede, Y., & Smith, A.B. (2013). Evidence for a unidimensional 15-item version of the CASP-19 using a Rasch model approach. Quality of Life 嫩B研究院, 22(1), 2429–2433.
Pereiro, A.X., Ramos-Lema, S., Juncos-Rabadán, O., Facal, D., & Lojo-Seoane, C. (2015). Normative scores of the Cambridge Cognitive Examination-Revised in healthy Spanish population. Psicothema, 27(1), 32-39. https://doi.org/10.7334/psicothema2014.169
Sexton, E., King-Kallimanis, B.L., Conroy, R.M., & Hickey, A. (2013). Psychometric evaluation of the CASP-19 quality of life scale in an older Irish cohort. Quality of Life 嫩B研究院, 22, 2549-2559. doi.org/10.1007/s11136-013-0388-7
Sim, J., Bartlam, B., & Bernard, M. (2011). The CASP-19 as a measure of quality of life in old age: Evaluation of its use in a retirement community. Quality of Life 嫩B研究院, 20(1), 997–1004.
Stoner, C.R., Orrell, M., & Spector, A. (2019) The psychometric properties of the control, autonomy, self-realization and pleasure scale (CASP-19) for older adults with dementia. Aging & Mental Health, 23(5), 643-649.
Wu, T.Y., Chie, W.C., Kuo, K.L., Wong, W.K., Liu, J.P., Chiu, S.T., Cheng, Y.H., Netuveli, G., & Blane, D. (2013). Quality of life (QOL) among community dwelling older people in Taiwan measured by the CASP-19, an index to capture QOL in old age. Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, 57(2), 143-150. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.archger.2013.03.010 |
We have reviewed more than 500 instruments for use with a number of diagnoses including stroke, spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury among several others.