| Literature DB >> 28776784 |
B Vivat1, T E Young2, J Winstanley3, J I Arraras4, K Black5, F Boyle3, A Bredart6, A Costantini7, J Guo8, M E Irarrazaval9, K Kobayashi10, R Kruizinga11, M Navarro12, S Omidvari13, G E Rohde14, S Serpentini15, N Spry16, H W M Van Laarhoven11, G M Yang17.
Abstract
The EORTC Quality of Life Group has just completed the final phase (field-testing and validation) of an international project to develop a stand-alone measure of spiritual well-being (SWB) for palliative cancer patients. Participants (n = 451)-from 14 countries on four continents; 54% female; 188 Christian; 50 Muslim; 156 with no religion-completed a provisional 36-item measure of SWB plus the EORTC QLQ-C15-PAL (PAL), then took part in a structured debriefing interview. All items showed good score distribution across response categories. We assessed scale structure using principal component analysis and Rasch analysis, and explored construct validity, and convergent/divergent validity with the PAL. Twenty-two items in four scoring scales (Relationship with Self, Relationships with Others, Relationship with Someone or Something Greater, and Existential) explained 53% of the variance. The measure also includes a global SWB item and nine other items. Scores on the PAL global quality-of-life item and Emotional Functioning scale weakly-moderately correlated with scores on the global SWB item and two of the four SWB scales. This new validated 32-item SWB measure addresses a distinct aspect of quality-of-life, and is now available for use in research and clinical practice, with a role as both a measurement and an intervention tool.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990EORTCzzm321990; international; measure; palliative care; questionnaire; spiritual
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28776784 DOI: 10.1111/ecc.12697
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Cancer Care (Engl) ISSN: 0961-5423 Impact factor: 2.520