Self-Report Scales to Measure Expectations and Appearance-Related Psychosocial Distress in Patients Seeking Cosmetic Treatments

Anne F Klassen, Stefan J Cano, Amy Alderman, Charles East, Lydia Badia, Stephen B Baker, Sam Robson, Andrea L Pusic, Anne F Klassen, Stefan J Cano, Amy Alderman, Charles East, Lydia Badia, Stephen B Baker, Sam Robson, Andrea L Pusic

Abstract

Background: The use of screening scales in cosmetic practices may help to identify patients who require education to modify inappropriate expectations and/or psychological support.

Objectives: To describe the development and validation of scales that measure expectations (about how one's appearance and quality of life might change with cosmetic treatments) and appearance-related psychosocial distress.

Methods: The scales were field-tested in patients 18 years and older seeking facial aesthetic or body contouring treatments. Recruitment took place in clinics in the United States, United Kingdom, and Canada between February 2010 and January 2015. Rasch Measurement Theory (RMT) analysis was used for psychometric evaluation. Scale scores range from 0 to 100; higher scores indicate more inappropriate expectations and higher psychosocial distress.

Results: Facial aesthetic (n = 279) and body contouring (n = 90) patients participated (97% response). In the RMT analysis, all items had ordered thresholds and acceptable item fit. Person Separation Index and Cronbach alpha values were 0.88 and 0.92 for the Expectation scale, and 0.81 and 0.89 for the Psychosocial Distress scale respectively. Higher expectation correlated with higher psychosocial distress (R = 0.40, P < .001). In the facial aesthetic group, lower scores on the FACE-Q Satisfaction with Appearance scale correlated with higher expectations (R = -0.27, P = .001) and psychosocial distress (R = -0.52, P < .001). In the body contouring group, lower scores on the BODY-Q Satisfaction with Body scale correlated with higher psychosocial distress (R = -0.31, P = .003). Type of treatment and marital status were associated with scale scores in multivariate models.

Conclusions: Future research could examine convergent and predictive validity. As research data are accumulated, norms and interpretation guidelines will be established.

Level of evidence: 2 Risk.

© 2016 The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, Inc. Reprints and permission: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
(A) Person Threshold Distribution for Expectation scale. The x-axis represents the construct (Expectations), with higher scores (more inappropriate expectations) increasing to the right. The y-axis shows the frequency of person measure locations (top histogram) and item locations (bottom histogram). (B) Person Threshold Distribution for Psychosocial Distress scale. The x-axis represents the construct (Psychosocial Distress), with higher scores (more distress) increasing to the right. The y-axis shows the frequency of person measure locations (top histogram) and item locations (bottom histogram).
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Mean score by procedural group in the sample.

Source: PubMed

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