Development of a German version of the Oswestry Disability Index. Part 1: cross-cultural adaptation, reliability, and validity

被引:0
作者
A. F. Mannion
A. Junge
J. C. T. Fairbank
J. Dvorak
D. Grob
机构
[1] Schulthess Klinik,Department of Rheumatology and Institute of Physical Medicine
[2] University Hospital,undefined
[3] Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre,undefined
来源
European Spine Journal | 2006年 / 15卷
关键词
Low-back pain; Condition-specific questionnaires; Cross-cultural adaptation; Reliability; Validity;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Patient-orientated assessment methods are of paramount importance in the evaluation of treatment outcome. The Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) is one of the condition-specific questionnaires recommended for use with back pain patients. To date, no German version has been published in the peer-reviewed literature. A cross-cultural adaptation of the ODI for the German language was carried out, according to established guidelines. One hundred patients with chronic low-back pain (35 conservative, 65 surgical) completed a questionnaire booklet containing the newly translated ODI, along with a 0–10 pain visual analogue scale (VAS), the Roland Morris Disability Questionnaire, and Likert scales for disability, medication intake and pain frequency [to assess ODI’s construct (convergent) validity]. Thirty-nine of these patients completed a second questionnaire within 2 weeks (to assess test–retest reliability). The intraclass correlation coefficient for the test–retest reliability of the questionnaire was 0.96. In test–retest, 74% of the individual questions were answered identically, and 21% just one grade higher or lower. The standard error of measurement (SEM) was 3.4, giving a “minimum detectable change” (MDC95%) for the ODI of approximately 9 points, i.e. the minimum change in an individual’s score required to be considered “real change” (with 95% confidence) over and above measurement error. The ODI scores correlated with VAS pain intensity (r=0.78, P<0.001) and Roland Morris scores (r=0.80, P<0.001). The mean baseline ODI scores differed significantly between the surgical and conservative patients (P<0.001), and between the different categories of the Likert scales for disability, medication use and pain frequency (in each case P<0.001). Our German version of the Oswestry questionnaire is reliable and valid, and shows psychometric characteristics as good as, if not better than, the original English version. It should represent a valuable tool for use in future patient-orientated outcome studies in German-speaking lands.
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页码:55 / 65
页数:10
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