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[A French questionnaire to assess quality of life of the aphasic patient: the SIP-65].

Authors :
Bénaim C
Pélissier J
Petiot S
Bareil M
Ferrat E
Royer E
Milhau D
Hérisson C
Source :
Annales de readaptation et de medecine physique : revue scientifique de la Societe francaise de reeducation fonctionnelle de readaptation et de medecine physique [Ann Readapt Med Phys] 2003 Feb; Vol. 46 (1), pp. 2-11.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Objectives: To develop and demonstrate validity and reliability of a aphasic-adapted version of the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP-136), a generic widespread questionnaire used to measure quality of life (QoL).<br />Design: Survey, outpatient oral interviews.<br />Population: Aphasic people from 20 to 80 years old, with a time from stroke or trauma of more than 12 months, living at home for more than six months, able to understand the questions with a Z-score profile at Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination above average for oral comprehension.<br />Method: 1. Developments of the short version of the SIP-136, from a first sample of aphasic people; 35 patients were included with a mean time from stroke or trauma of 17 months. This first step consisted in excluding the least relevant items and/or subscales, rewriting some items to make them easier to understand, studying redundancy by multiple components analysis (MCA) and deleting some redundant items. 2. Validity compared with initial SIP-136 and reliability (inter-rater and test-retest) from a second sample of 55 aphasic people (mean time from stroke or trauma = 23 months).<br />Results: - 1. The first step of development led to a short version with eight subscales and 65 items (SIP-65) exploring physical, psychological and social components of QoL; it took about 16 min to fill it, less than half of the time necessary for the SIP-136. 2. Linear correlation of the responses between SIP-65 and SIP-136 was good: r = 0.97; p < 10(-6). SIP-65 demonstrated a good test-retest (r = 0.97; p < 10(-6)) and inter-rater (r = 0.92; p < 10(-6)) reliability.<br />Discussion and Conclusion: SIP-65, a short version of SIP-136, is feasible and clinically sound and must be recommended to assess health-related functional status of French aphasic people.

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
0168-6054
Volume :
46
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Annales de readaptation et de medecine physique : revue scientifique de la Societe francaise de reeducation fonctionnelle de readaptation et de medecine physique
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
12657476
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0168-6054(02)00306-9