The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the world and can claim strong cross-cultural validity due to their development in collaboration with international field centres. To enhance conceptual equivalence of quality of life across cultures, optional national items are often developed for use alongside the core instrument. The present study outlines the development of national items for the New Zealand WHOQOL-BREF. Focus groups with members of the community as well as health experts discussed what constitutes quality of life in their opinion. Based on themes extracted of aspects not contained in the existing WHOQOL instrument, 46 candidate items were generated and subsequently rated for th...
"nObjective: This study has used Item Response Theory (IRT) to examine the psychometric properties o...
The World Health Organization has developed a brief generic questionnaire to assess quality of life,...
In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in demand for subjective measures of health-rela...
<div><p>The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
Quality of life (QOL) assessments that are easily administered and which do not impose a great burde...
Abstract Objective: When the World Health Organization Quality of Life tools were developed by 15 co...
To facilitate comparison across cultures, the World Health Organization (WHO) has been developing a ...
This brief report describes cultural adaptation of the WHOQOL-100 questionnaire for Taiwan. The stan...
In the last 20 years, both health care providers and researchers have agreed that the efficacy of tr...
Quality of life differs between individuals and across different cultures. Traditional methods of co...
This paper describes the World Health Organization's project to develop a quality of life instrument...
The goal of this article was to research the psychometric properties of the WHOQOL-BREF(PT) instrume...
"nObjective: This study has used Item Response Theory (IRT) to examine the psychometric properties o...
The World Health Organization has developed a brief generic questionnaire to assess quality of life,...
In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in demand for subjective measures of health-rela...
<div><p>The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
The World Health Organisation Quality of Life (WHOQOL) questionnaires are widely used around the wor...
Quality of life (QOL) assessments that are easily administered and which do not impose a great burde...
Abstract Objective: When the World Health Organization Quality of Life tools were developed by 15 co...
To facilitate comparison across cultures, the World Health Organization (WHO) has been developing a ...
This brief report describes cultural adaptation of the WHOQOL-100 questionnaire for Taiwan. The stan...
In the last 20 years, both health care providers and researchers have agreed that the efficacy of tr...
Quality of life differs between individuals and across different cultures. Traditional methods of co...
This paper describes the World Health Organization's project to develop a quality of life instrument...
The goal of this article was to research the psychometric properties of the WHOQOL-BREF(PT) instrume...
"nObjective: This study has used Item Response Theory (IRT) to examine the psychometric properties o...
The World Health Organization has developed a brief generic questionnaire to assess quality of life,...
In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in demand for subjective measures of health-rela...