# Refining Scale Measurement: Reassessing Oral Impacts on Daily Performances Properties With Item Response Theory

**Authors:** Roger Keller Celeste, Matheus de França Perazzo, Georgios Tsakos, Michael Reichenheim

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/cdoe.70034 · Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology · 2025-11-06

## TL;DR

This study improves the Oral Impact on Daily Performance (OIDP) scale by analyzing its psychometric properties and proposing a shorter, more efficient version for large-scale surveys.

## Contribution

The study introduces a refined, shorter version of the OIDP scale with better psychometric properties for use in population surveys.

## Key findings

- The original OIDP scale had two violations of conditional independence between specific items.
- A shorter version of the scale with three items removed showed strong psychometric fit (RMSEA=0.02, CFI=0.99, TLI=0.99).
- Three item pairs in the scale were found to be redundant based on IRT analysis.

## Abstract

Many oral health‐related quality of life instruments have been developed but few have undergone a comprehensive psychometric assessment. One commonly used measure is the Oral Impact on Daily Performance (OIDP). This study revised the configural and metric properties as well as the performance of items based on Item Response Theory (IRT) of a dichotomous‐item version of OIDP in Brazil.

The nine‐item dichotomous version of the OIDP was analysed using data from a nationally representative sample from the Oral Health Survey (SBBrasil 2010). It consisted of 30 064 individuals aged 12 to 75 and was split into two partitions comprising n1 = 20 040 and n2 = 10 024, respectively. Confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) were conducted on the larger partition and cross‐validated on the smaller to assess configural and metric properties. The item performance was evaluated using a 2‐parameter item response theory (IRT) model. Sampling weights were used in all analyses.

The unidimensional model presented two violations of conditional independence, one between items i5 (practising sports) and i4 (going out) and another between items i6 (trouble in speaking) and i7 (shame of speaking or smiling). A CFA of the most parsimonious model (removing i5, i6 and i7) yielded a RMSEA = 0.02, WRMR = 1.42, CFI = 0.99 and TLI = 0.99. The IRT analyses showed that three pairs of items had very similar levels of difficulty and discrimination suggesting redundancy.

A shorter dichotomous version of the OIDP scale has acceptable configural and metric properties. Being more concise and thus efficient, it may be better suited for large‐scale population surveys than the version currently in use.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** OIDP (MESH:D004834)

## Full text

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## References

31 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12808854/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12808854