QualityMetric announces royalty-free access to DYNHA® for scholarly research
July 20">
QualityMetric
announces royalty-free access to DYNHA® for
scholarly research July 20, 2004 -
QualityMetric Incorporated announced today that royalty-free access to DYNHA®
generic and disease-specific computer adaptive health assessments will be
offered for the purpose of scholarly research starting August 2, 2004. According
to John E. Ware, Jr., PhD, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Science Officer of
QualityMetric, "We decided to offer DYNHA® on the
Internet in the same manner we offer the 'static' SF-36®
Health Survey, regardless of our development costs, to accelerate applications
in clinical research and practice, as well as to stimulate growth in scientific
literature devoted to this very important advance." QualityMetric was the first company to offer
applications of computer adaptive technology (CAT) to health outcomes
measurement on the Internet, developing DYNHA® to make
health status surveys much shorter, more precise, and less expensive, by
matching questions to each respondent’s health level. DYNHA®
produces norm-based scores that are easily interpreted, comparable with the
world’s most widely used static tools (e.g., SF-36®
Health Survey), and have the precision required for patient-level monitoring. (Related
article links below.) With respect to DYNHA's more precise
measurement for respondents with greater pathology: "to
my knowledge it is new. The idea of a planned smooth increase in precision from
respondents who are healthy (and about which there is little concern) to those
who are less healthy is another new contribution to the CAT toolbox." To
view a brief introductory video on computer adaptive technology click here. DYNHA® Health
Assessments Available Royalty-Free for Scholarly Research: DYNHA® Generic
Health Status Assessments: DYNHA®
Disease/Condition-Specific Health Status Assessments: Evolving State-of-the-Art Dynamic Health
Assessments to Application-Focused Solutions Dr. Ware and QualityMetric’s Measurement
Science and Business Development Teams have become world-recognized leaders of
CAT with experience including: DYNHA®
collaborations with eight of the world’s most noted clinical research
teams, the National Institutes of Health, and other government grant sources
to expand the scope of dynamic health assessment to additional disease
states and alternative modes of administration. Worldwide commercial implementation including
pharmaceutical, managed care, clinical, and government settings, resulting
in over a quarter of a million dynamic survey administrations conducted to
date (July 2004). "At this point," noted Dr. Ware,
"the measurement science and computer technology behind DYNHA®
are established and the practical benefits are proven. Our efforts now are
focused on integrating DYNHA® to achieve outcomes
monitoring 'solutions' that are easy to use and that meet the needs of specific
applications." Providing royalty-free access to the research community is
expected to yield independent studies and to generate feedback on how to improve
DYNHA® features including delivery mechanisms and
reports to patients and clinicians. QualityMetric also actively pursues
technology partnerships to expand current online availability to include
numerous modes of administration (desktop software, enterprise software,
Interactive Voice Response (IVR), PDAs and tablets, etc.). "QualityMetric
overcame multiple barriers of entry with CAT and can now focus on advancement
and refinement," Dr. Ware concluded. Academic and
clinical researchers interested in royalty-free access to QualityMetric’s
dynamic health assessments can click here
for further information and registration. Articles for further reading: Ware JE, Jr.: Conceptualization
and measurement of health-related quality of life: comments on an evolving
field. Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation.
2003 Apr;84(4 Supplement 2):S43-51. [This article summarizes personal views
on the rapidly evolving field of functional health assessment and comments
on their implications for advances in assessment methods used in
rehabilitation medicine.] Nine articles in special December, 2003 issue
of "Quality of Life Research" on topics
relating to the DYNHA® and the DYNHA®
Headache Impact Test™. Bjorner JB, Ware JE, Jr.: Using
modern psychometric methods to measure health outcomes. Medical
Outcomes Trust Monitor 1998;3:11-16. Ware JE, Jr., Bjorner JB, Kosinski M: Dynamic
health assessments: The search for more practical and more precise outcomes
measures. Quality of Life Newsletter 1999;21. Ware JE, Jr.: Everyone into the
"pools": A
comment on the future of item banking. ISOQOL Newsletter
2003;8:2. Ware JE, Jr., Bjorner JB, Kosinski M: Practical
Implications of Item Response Theory and Computerized Adaptive Testing. Medical
Care 2000:38:73-82.
David Thissen, PhD
Professor, Quantitative Program, Department of Psychology
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Note: Some of the DYNHA® Health Assessments below are
functioning prototype applications and may be customized for implementation in a
variety of settings.