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. 2020 Dec 3;20:293. doi: 10.1186/s12874-020-01179-5

Table 2.

Consensus of components of outcome measurement instruments that do not involve biological sampling

Component Consensusa on the term (%) Elaboration Consensus on the elaboration (%)
Equipment 43/48 (90%) (R2b) All equipment used in preparation, administration, and assigning scores 43/48 (90%) (R2)
Preparatory actions 38/46 (83%) (R2)

1. ‘First time only’ general preparatory actions, such as required expertise or training for professionals to prepare, administer, store or assign the scores

2. Specific preparatory actions for each measurement, such as

 • preparations of equipment by professionalsc

 • preparations of the patientd by the professional

 • Preparations undertaken by the patients

37/46 (80%) (R2)
Unprocessed data collection 30/44 (68%) (R2) What the patient and/or professional(s) actually do to obtain the unprocessed data 33/44 (75%) (R2)
Data processing and storage 44/44 (100%) (R2) All actions undertaken on the unprocessed data to allow the assignment of the score 37/44 (84%) (R2)
Remove: ‘preparation of scoring’ 39/44 (89%) (R2)
Assignment of the score 36/44 (82%) (R2) Methods used to transform processed data into a final scoree on the outcome measurement instrument. 34/44 (77%) (R2)

a Consensus was set at 67% of the panelists (strongly) agreed to a proposal, the denominator can be decreased because panelists considered themselves to have ‘no expertise’ on a specific proposal or dropped-out; b R2: consensus reached in Round 2; c Professionals are those who are involved in the preparation or the performance of the measurement, in the data processing, or in the assignment of the score; this may be done by one and the same person, or by different persons; d In the COSMIN methodology we use the word ‘patient.’ However, sometimes the target population is not patients, but e.g. healthy individuals, caregivers, clinicians, or body structures (e.g. joints, or lesions). In these cases, the word patient should be read as e.g. healthy volunteer, or clinician; e The score can be further used or interpreted by converting a score to another scale, metric or classification. For example, a continuous score is classified into an ordinal score (e.g. mild/moderate/severe), a score is dichotomized into below or above a normal value, patients are classified as responder to the intervention (e.g. when their change is larger than the Minimal Important Change (MIC) value)