Authors
Elizabeth Broadbent, Carissa Wilkes, Heidi Koschwanez, John Weinman, Sam Norton, Keith J Petrie
Publication date
2015/11/2
Source
Psychology & health
Volume
30
Issue
11
Pages
1361-1385
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Objective: This paper aims to systematically review the use and performance of the Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire (Brief IPQ).
Design: Electronic databases were searched for papers administering the Brief IPQ published in peer-reviewed journals. Data were extracted from the results for meta-analysis.
Main outcome measures: Use by illness population, country, language and study design. The questionnaire’s concurrent validity, predictive validity, sensitivity to change, discriminant validity and mean scores for different populations were summarised.
Results: The review included 188 papers. The Brief IPQ has been administered to patients from age 8 to over 80, with a wide range of illnesses, in 26 languages from 36 countries. Pooled correlations between illness perceptions and depression, anxiety, blood glucose levels and quality of life were consistent with previous research and theory (range .25–.49 for …
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