Cross-cultural adaptation and psychometric validation of the Quality of Life Index among Hausa-speaking people with spinal cord injury in Northwest Nigeria

Bashir Kaka, Surajo Kamilu Sulaiman, Bashir Bello, Ashiru Hamza Mohammad, Umar Muhammad Bello, Dauda Salihu, Muhammad Chutiyami, Francis Fatoye

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Quality of life (QoL) is an important outcome that is used to measure the success of healthcare interventions. Valid and reliable instruments are required to assess QoL. Hence, we conducted this study to adapt and validate the QoL Index (QLI) among Hausa-speaking people with spinal cord injury (SCI) in northwest Nigeria.
Method: Using the International Society for Pharmacoeconomic and Outcome Research principles of good practice and the consensus-based standards for the selection of health measurement instruments guidelines, the QLI-SCI version was translated into Hausa language and tested for content validity, internal consistency, and test–retest reliability among people with SCI in northwest Nigeria.
Result: The Hausa QLI (HQLI) demonstrated good content validity (CVI= 92.18%), internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha= 0.855), and test–retest reliability (ICC= 0.949 [95% CI, 0.916–0.969]).
Conclusion: The HQLI can be deployed to assess QoL among Hausa-speaking people with SCI, thus promoting robust measurement of QoL in an SCI population.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Nursing Measurement
Early online date2 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2 Jul 2024

Keywords

  • spinal cord injury
  • quality of life
  • translation
  • psychometrics
  • reliability
  • validity

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