51. Quality of life in head and neck cancer patients after surgical resection: translation into Cantonese and validation of the EORTC QLQ-H&N35.
- Author
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Bower WF, Vlantis AC, Chung TM, Cheung SK, Bjordal K, and van Hasselt CA
- Subjects
- Aged, Deglutition Disorders psychology, Female, Hong Kong, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Neoplasm Staging, Otorhinolaryngologic Neoplasms pathology, Pilot Projects, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Otorhinolaryngologic Neoplasms psychology, Otorhinolaryngologic Neoplasms surgery, Postoperative Complications psychology, Quality of Life psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Translating
- Abstract
Conclusion: High convergent and discriminant validity between subscales was achieved after the translation of EORTC QLQ-H&N35 into Cantonese. Most subscales were assessing distinct components of quality of life (QoL)., Objectives: The study aimed to translate the EORTC QLQ-H&N35 cancer module into Cantonese and to confirm validity and reliability for use in a Hong Kong head and neck (H&N) cancer population., Subjects and Methods: An ethnocentric forward-backward translation of EORTC QLQ-H&N35 was conducted by bilingual head and neck health professionals. Discrepancies were identified and problematic wording and concepts revised. Further review preceded pilot testing in 119 postoperative H&N cancer patients. Internal consistency within each subscale, convergent and discriminant validity to check the item relevance and item representativeness within and between subscales were examined. Mean and standard deviations of each subscale and single item and Cronbach's alpha coefficients for subscales were calculated., Results: Six of seven subscales achieved standard reliability (Cronbach's alpha coefficient >0.7). Correlation coefficients between an item and its own subscale were significantly higher than the coefficients with other subscales. Scaling success was found in all subscales. Pearson's correlation coefficient between subscales was <0.70, except between the subscales swallowing and trouble with social eating (r = 0.795), and speech problems and social contact (r = 0.754).
- Published
- 2009
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