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Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer 7/2013

01-07-2013 | Original Article

Psychometric evaluation of the Offspring Cancer Needs Instrument (OCNI): an instrument to assess the psychosocial unmet needs of young people who have a parent with cancer

Authors: P. Patterson, F. E. J. McDonald, P. Butow, K. J. White, D. S. J. Costa, A. Pearce, M. L. Bell

Published in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Issue 7/2013

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Abstract

Purpose

The current study sought to establish the psychometric properties of the revised Offspring Cancer Needs Instrument (OCNI) when completed by a large sample of young people impacted by parental cancer recruited from multiple settings.

Methods

The psychometric properties were evaluated with 256 young people aged between 12 and 24 who had a parent or primary caregiver diagnosed with any type or stage of cancer within the last 5 years and who was still living. Exploratory factor analysis was conducted as an initial step in determining the dimensional structure of the questionnaire, and further assessment followed using Rasch analysis. Construct validity and test–retest reliability (n = 35) were also assessed.

Results

The final OCNI has 47 items and 7 domains: information, family issues, practical assistance, time out, feelings, support (friends) and support (other young people). There was a reasonable spread of responses across the scale for every item, and Rasch analysis results suggested that overall, respondents used the scale consistently. The retest correlation for the overall measure was 0.73. Support for construct validity was provided by the correlations between psychological distress and the OCNI domains. The internal consistency was excellent; the lowest domain Cronbach alpha is 0.89.

Conclusions

The OCNI is the first measure of psychosocial unmet needs which has been developed specifically for young people who have a parent with cancer. It has sound psychometric properties and will provide substantial clinical benefit in identifying the unmet needs of this population to assist with the provision of targeted supportive care services.
Footnotes
1
Item and person fit refer to items or respondents whose response patterns deviate from the expectations of the Rasch model. See Pallant and Tennant [15] for a concise summary of these statistics.
 
2
There were no differences between people who were members of CanTeen and people who were not with regard to total K10 scores (t 246 = 1.15, p = 0.25) or total unmet needs scores (t 242 = 0.08, p = 0.93).
 
3
People who completed the survey online were older (M = 17.3) than those who completed the paper version (M = 15.9 (t 254 = 2.53, p = 0.01)). There was no significant difference between the gender of those who completed the survey online or used the paper version (χ 2 (1, N = 256) = 3.59, p = 0.06).
 
4
Note that there are other measures of similar length designed for young people, for example the CNQ-YP designed for 15–30-year olds has 70 items [1].
 
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Metadata
Title
Psychometric evaluation of the Offspring Cancer Needs Instrument (OCNI): an instrument to assess the psychosocial unmet needs of young people who have a parent with cancer
Authors
P. Patterson
F. E. J. McDonald
P. Butow
K. J. White
D. S. J. Costa
A. Pearce
M. L. Bell
Publication date
01-07-2013
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Issue 7/2013
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Electronic ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-013-1749-z

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