Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.

The WHOQOL instrument was adapted as a health-related QOL instrument for a population-based epidemiologic study of eye diseases in southern India, the Andhra Pradesh Eye Disease Study (APEDS). A follow-up question was added to each item in WHOQOL to determine whether the decrease in QOL was due to a...

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Main Authors: Dandona Lalit, McCarty Catherine, Rao Gullapalli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2000-01-01
Series:Indian Journal of Ophthalmology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijo.in/article.asp?issn=0301-4738;year=2000;volume=48;issue=1;spage=65;epage=70;aulast=Dandona
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spelling doaj-fa0c312cb3034f278f8f9ecab3db626b2020-11-24T21:30:44ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Ophthalmology0301-47382000-01-014816570Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.Dandona LalitMcCarty CatherineRao GullapalliThe WHOQOL instrument was adapted as a health-related QOL instrument for a population-based epidemiologic study of eye diseases in southern India, the Andhra Pradesh Eye Disease Study (APEDS). A follow-up question was added to each item in WHOQOL to determine whether the decrease in QOL was due to any health reasons including eye-related reasons. Modifications in WHOQOL and translation in local language were done through the use of the focus groups including health professionals and people not related to health care. The modified instrument has 28 items across 6 domains of the WHOQOL and was translated into the local language, Telugu, using the pragmatic approach. It takes 10-20 minutes to be administered by a trained interviewer. Reliability was within acceptable range. This health-related QOL instrument is being used in the population-based study APEDS to develop a vision-specific QOL instrument which could potentially be used to assess the impact of visual impairment on QOL across different cultures and for use in evaluating eye-care interventions. This health-related QOL instrument could also be used to develop other disease-specific instruments as it allows assessment of the extent to which various aspects of QOL are affected by a variety of health problems.http://www.ijo.in/article.asp?issn=0301-4738;year=2000;volume=48;issue=1;spage=65;epage=70;aulast=DandonaAdultAgedComparative StudyEye DiseasesepidemiologypsychologyFemaleHealth Status IndicatorsHumansIncidence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dandona Lalit
McCarty Catherine
Rao Gullapalli
spellingShingle Dandona Lalit
McCarty Catherine
Rao Gullapalli
Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
Indian Journal of Ophthalmology
Adult
Aged
Comparative Study
Eye Diseases
epidemiology
psychology
Female
Health Status Indicators
Humans
Incidence
author_facet Dandona Lalit
McCarty Catherine
Rao Gullapalli
author_sort Dandona Lalit
title Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
title_short Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
title_full Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
title_fullStr Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation of WHOQOL as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
title_sort adaptation of whoqol as health-related quality of life instrument to develop a vision-specific instrument.
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Indian Journal of Ophthalmology
issn 0301-4738
publishDate 2000-01-01
description The WHOQOL instrument was adapted as a health-related QOL instrument for a population-based epidemiologic study of eye diseases in southern India, the Andhra Pradesh Eye Disease Study (APEDS). A follow-up question was added to each item in WHOQOL to determine whether the decrease in QOL was due to any health reasons including eye-related reasons. Modifications in WHOQOL and translation in local language were done through the use of the focus groups including health professionals and people not related to health care. The modified instrument has 28 items across 6 domains of the WHOQOL and was translated into the local language, Telugu, using the pragmatic approach. It takes 10-20 minutes to be administered by a trained interviewer. Reliability was within acceptable range. This health-related QOL instrument is being used in the population-based study APEDS to develop a vision-specific QOL instrument which could potentially be used to assess the impact of visual impairment on QOL across different cultures and for use in evaluating eye-care interventions. This health-related QOL instrument could also be used to develop other disease-specific instruments as it allows assessment of the extent to which various aspects of QOL are affected by a variety of health problems.
topic Adult
Aged
Comparative Study
Eye Diseases
epidemiology
psychology
Female
Health Status Indicators
Humans
Incidence
url http://www.ijo.in/article.asp?issn=0301-4738;year=2000;volume=48;issue=1;spage=65;epage=70;aulast=Dandona
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AT mccartycatherine adaptationofwhoqolashealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumenttodevelopavisionspecificinstrument
AT raogullapalli adaptationofwhoqolashealthrelatedqualityoflifeinstrumenttodevelopavisionspecificinstrument
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