4.6 Article

Translation and validation of 17-item Wound-QoL questionnaire in a Chinese population

Journal

INTERNATIONAL WOUND JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages 659-668

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/iwj.13907

Keywords

chronic wound; quality of life; reliability; validity

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We aimed to translate and validate the Wound-QoL-17 questionnaire for measuring the quality of life in Chinese patients with chronic wounds. Through various tests and analyses, we found that the Chinese version of Wound-QoL-17 showed good reliability and validity, and is suitable for evaluating the quality of life of patients with chronic wounds.
We aimed to translate the 17-item questionnaire to measure the quality of life of patients with chronic wounds (Wound-QoL-17) and verify its reliability and validity in the Chinese population. The standard Chinese version of the Wound-QoL-17 was determined through translation, back translation, and cultural adaptation. A total of 121 patients with chronic wounds from the wound center of a tertiary hospital in Beijing were recruited. Through a questionnaire and physical examination, we tested the criterion-related validity, known group validity, structural validity, internal consistency coefficient (Cronbach's alpha), and test-retest correlation. A new structure of four factors was extracted by exploratory factor analysis, and the cumulative contribution rate was 72.23%. The total score and that of the four factors, which were significantly correlated with the EuroQol Five Dimensions Questionnaire (EQ-5D) and the Short Form-36 Health Survey (SF-36) (P < 0.05), also showed statistically significant differences between patients with different pain grades, with or without wound odour, and between different groups of patients reporting wound changes in the past 2 weeks. Cronbach's alpha was between 0.779 and 0.906, while the test-retest reliability was between 0.532 and 0.802. We concluded that the Chinese Wound-QoL-17 has good reliability and validity and is suitable for evaluating the quality of life of patients with chronic wounds.

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