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, cou...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
This article describes the methods adopted by the International Quality of Life Assessment (IQOLA) p...
Objectives: Poor agreement between preference-based health-related quality-of-life instruments has b...
Increasingly, translated and culturally adapted health-related quality of life measures are being us...
Data from general population samples in 11 countries (n = 1483 to 9151) were used to assess data qua...
Quality of life differs between individuals and across different cultures. Traditional methods of co...
There is growing demand for translations of health status questionnaires for use in multinational dr...
Rasch models for polytomous items were used to assess the scaling assumptions and compare item respo...
Data from general population surveys (n = 1483 to 9151) in nine European countries (Denmark, France,...
Data from general population surveys (n = 1771 to 9151) in nine European countries (Denmark, France,...
In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in demand for subjective measures of health-rela...
Following the translation development stage, the second research stage of the IQOLA Project tests th...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
A crucial prerequisite to the use of the SF-36 Health Survey in multinational studies is the reprodu...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
This article describes the methods adopted by the International Quality of Life Assessment (IQOLA) p...
Objectives: Poor agreement between preference-based health-related quality-of-life instruments has b...
Increasingly, translated and culturally adapted health-related quality of life measures are being us...
Data from general population samples in 11 countries (n = 1483 to 9151) were used to assess data qua...
Quality of life differs between individuals and across different cultures. Traditional methods of co...
There is growing demand for translations of health status questionnaires for use in multinational dr...
Rasch models for polytomous items were used to assess the scaling assumptions and compare item respo...
Data from general population surveys (n = 1483 to 9151) in nine European countries (Denmark, France,...
Data from general population surveys (n = 1771 to 9151) in nine European countries (Denmark, France,...
In recent years there has been a worldwide increase in demand for subjective measures of health-rela...
Following the translation development stage, the second research stage of the IQOLA Project tests th...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
A crucial prerequisite to the use of the SF-36 Health Survey in multinational studies is the reprodu...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
Purpose: To evaluate whether the WHOQOL-BREF measures the QOL construct in the same way across natio...
This article describes the methods adopted by the International Quality of Life Assessment (IQOLA) p...
Objectives: Poor agreement between preference-based health-related quality-of-life instruments has b...