Rater bias and the measurement of support needs

Date

2006

Authors

Guscia, R.
Harries, J.
Kirby, N.
Nettelbeck, T.

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Journal of Intellectual and Developmental Disability, 2006; 31(3):156-160

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Roma Guscia, Julia Harries, Neil Kirby and Ted Nettelbeck

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Abstract

Background: The development and use of support need instruments for funding disability services is a relatively recent initiative. Although the use of these measures appears at face value to provide an objective measure of support needs, little is known about their psychometric properties, particularly with respect to rater bias and purpose of assessment. A measure of support that has been developed in Australia to provide estimates of service needs and associated funding is the Service Need Assessment Profile (SNAP). Method: This study investigated whether SNAP scores obtained for different assessment purposes - research and funding - are affected by rater bias, by comparing SNAP to 3 other measures of support from 29 people with intellectual disabilities. Results: We found that SNAP scores completed for funding purposes showed an individual's support needs to be much greater than comparison scores on both SNAP and the 3 other measures obtained for research purposes. Conclusions: Our results suggest that support measures such as SNAP may significantly overestimate support needs when raters know the assessment is being used for funding purposes.

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Copyright © 2006 Australasian Society for the Study of Intellectual Disability Inc.

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