AI Article Synopsis

  • This study evaluated the validity of the Friendship Scale (FS) as a tool to measure social isolation in patients with low back pain (LBP).
  • LBP participants showed higher rates of reported social isolation compared to a general population sample, with 26% of LBP patients indicating social isolation versus 9% in the general group.
  • The FS demonstrated good reliability and validity, suggesting it is an effective instrument for measuring social isolation in LBP patients, even though the overall levels of social isolation reported were low.

Article Abstract

Background: Low back pain (LBP) is common, and social isolation is both a risk factor for poor recovery and a consequence. However, no studies seem to have validated social isolation measures in LBP populations.

Aims: This study assessed the validity of the Friendship Scale (FS), a brief measure of social isolation.

Methods: LBP participants were 100 consecutive consenting adult patients attending physiotherapy outpatient clinics, matched (1:2) by age and gender with a general population sample (GPS; n=200). FS validation was through factor analysis, internal consistency, sensitivity by known groups, and Rasch analysis.

Results: : There were significant differences between LPB and GPS on 5 of the 6 FS items. Social isolation on the FS was reported by 26% of the LBP cohort compared with 9% of the GPS. All FS items loaded on the principal component >0.60, suggesting unidimensionality. Internal consistency was α=0.81. The FS was sensitive by pain severity and study cohort. Rasch analysis showed no disordered items, although 2 items were marginally misfitting. Differential item functioning by sex was observed on 1 item; there was no other observed differential item functioning. After removal of the worst fitting item (feeling alone), the remaining items fit the Rasch model. This, however, may have been a function of study samples.

Conclusions: Generally, the FS performed well, and its descriptive system contains excess capacity beyond that needed in the study population; that is, those with LBP were not particularly socially isolated, and responses indicating severe social isolation were barely reported by these participants. Overall, the FS appears to be a suitable instrument for assessing social isolation among LBP patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AJP.0b013e31824b3aedDOI Listing

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