The reformatting and changes that were made to the Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ) 1 for the Post-cold Asthma Control and Exacerbation (PAX) study 2 raise some important concerns about modifying validated questionnaires.
Just like mechanical and electrical measurement instruments, validated questionnaires are precision measurement instruments. The only difference being that they measure subjective rather than objective health status. Like any mechanical or electrical instrument, a great deal of care and expertise goes into the development of these questionnaires. Many studies have provided developers with the knowledge of how to: specify what the questionnaire is intended to measure (its construct); structure and select the right questions; formulate the responses; select the time specifications; optimise the page formulation for accurate completion; conduct validation studies (measurement properties and whether the instrument is measuring what it is meant to measure) and provide users the wherewithal to place a clinical interpretation on the data. For the same reason that one would never think of changing the numbers on the dial of a mechanical spirometer, one should never change a validated questionnaire. Even very small changes can destroy its validity.
Questions are selected by well-established methods (usually either “importance” or “factor analysis”) 3 and their position in the questionnaire carefully ordered. Wording is checked for ease and accuracy of understanding (cognitive debriefing). For the analysis, each question has a weighting. For some questionnaires, this means that an algorithm must be used ( e.g. The Short Form (SF)-36 Health Survey) 4, in others ( e.g. the ACQ) questions are selected in such a way that they have equal weighting and the overall score is the mean of all the responses. The wording of questions should never be changed. Shortened versions should only be used when they have been …