Literature DB >> 9817110

Testing the equivalence of translations of widely used response choice labels: results from the IQOLA Project. International Quality of Life Assessment.

S D Keller1, J E Ware, B Gandek, N K Aaronson, J Alonso, G Apolone, J B Bjorner, J Brazier, M Bullinger, S Fukuhara, S Kaasa, A Leplège, R W Sanson-Fisher, M Sullivan, S Wood-Dauphinee.   

Abstract

The similarity in meaning assigned to response choice labels from the SF-36 Health Survey (SF-36) was evaluated across countries. Convenience samples of judges (range, 10 to 117; median = 48) from 13 countries rated translations of response choice labels, using a variation of the Thurstone method of equal appearing intervals. Judges marked a point on a 10-cm line-representing the magnitude of a response choice label (e.g., "good" relative to the anchors of "poor" and "excellent"). Ratings were evaluated to determine the ordinal consistency of response choice labels within a response scale; the degree to which differences between adjacent response choice labels were equal interval; and the amount of variance due to response choice label, country, judge, and interaction between response choice label and country. Results confirmed the hypothesized ordering of response choice labels; the percentage of ordinal pairs ranged from 88.7% to 100% (median = 98.2%) across countries and response scales. Examination of the average magnitudes of response choice labels supported the "quasi-interval" nature of the scales. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) results supported the generalizability of response choice magnitudes across countries; labels explained 64% to 77% of the variance in ratings, and country explained 1% to 3%. These results support the equivalence of SF-36 response choice labels across countries. Departures from the assumption of equal intervals, when observed, were similar across countries and were greatest for the two response scales that are recalibrated under standard SF-36 scoring. Results provide justification for scoring translations of individual items using standard SF-36 scoring; whether these items form the same scales in other countries as they do in the United States is evaluated with tests of scaling assumptions.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9817110     DOI: 10.1016/s0895-4356(98)00084-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol        ISSN: 0895-4356            Impact factor:   6.437


  34 in total

1.  Comparison of German language versions of the QWB-SA and SF-36 evaluating outcomes for patients with prostate disease.

Authors:  D Frosch; F Porzsolt; R Heicappell; K Kleinschmidt; M Schatz; S Weinknecht; R M Kaplan
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 4.147

2.  Translating the Short-Form Headache Impact Test (HIT-6) in 27 countries: methodological and conceptual issues.

Authors:  B Gandek; J Alacoque; V Uzun; M Andrew-Hobbs; K Davis
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 4.147

3.  Construct validation of the Greek SF-36 Health Survey.

Authors:  Fotios Anagnostopoulos; Dimitris Niakas; Evelina Pappa
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2005-10       Impact factor: 4.147

4.  The SF36 Version 2: critical analyses of population weights, scoring algorithms and population norms.

Authors:  Graeme Hawthorne; Richard H Osborne; Anne Taylor; Jan Sansoni
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2007-02-01       Impact factor: 4.147

5.  An ethno-medical perspective on research participation: a qualitative pilot study.

Authors:  José L Calderón; Richard S Baker; Horacio Fabrega; José G Conde; Ron D Hays; Erik Fleming; Keith Norris
Journal:  MedGenMed       Date:  2006-04-25

6.  The adaptation into Spanish of the Coddington Life Events Scales (CLES).

Authors:  E Villalonga-Olives; J M Valderas; J A Palacio-Vieira; M Herdman; L Rajmil; J Alonso
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2008-03-05       Impact factor: 4.147

7.  A comparison of the scaling properties of the English, Spanish, French, and Chinese EQ-5D descriptive systems.

Authors:  Nan Luo; Minghui Li; Julie Chevalier; Andrew Lloyd; Michael Herdman
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2012-12-25       Impact factor: 4.147

8.  Development and validation of an instrument to measure the effects of a mistletoe preparation on quality of life of cancer patients: the Life Quality Lectin-53 (LQL-53) Questionnaire.

Authors:  Inge Kirchberger; Dieter Wetzel; Thomas Finger
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2004-03       Impact factor: 4.147

9.  Interpretation of response categories in patient-reported rating scales: a controlled study among people with Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Ida Knutsson; Helena Rydström; Jan Reimer; Per Nyberg; Peter Hagell
Journal:  Health Qual Life Outcomes       Date:  2010-06-24       Impact factor: 3.186

10.  Cross-language differential item functioning of the job content questionnaire among European countries: the JACE study.

Authors:  Bongkyoo Choi; Jakob Blue Bjorner; Per-Olof Ostergren; Els Clays; Irene Houtman; Laura Punnett; Annika Rosengren; Dirk De Bacquer; Marco Ferrario; Maaike Bilau; Robert Karasek
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2009
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