Development of Arabic Version of Vestibular Disorders Activities of Daily Living Scale: Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Assessment of Psychometric Properties
Author(s) -
Sarah Alshehri,
Jaya Shanker Tedla,
Ravi Shankar Reddy,
Paul Silvian Samuel,
Kanagaraj Rengaramanujam,
Venkata Nagaraj Kakaraparthi,
Irshad Ahmad,
Khalid A. Alahmari
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
medical science monitor
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.636
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1643-3750
pISSN - 1234-1010
DOI - 10.12659/msm.928977
Subject(s) - content validity , scale (ratio) , reliability (semiconductor) , psychology , turkish , test (biology) , adaptation (eye) , psychometrics , arabic , clinical psychology , medicine , applied psychology , linguistics , paleontology , power (physics) , physics , philosophy , quantum mechanics , neuroscience , biology
Background The vestibular disorders activities of daily living (VADL) scale is a valid and reliable scale created 2 decades ago to specifically test the functional problems of patients with vestibular disorders. Since its development, the VADL has been cross-culturally validated and adapted in Spanish, Portuguese, Persian, and Turkish languages. A version is not yet available in Arabic, the primary language of more than 400 million people worldwide. This study aimed to translate the patient-reported VADL into Arabic and test its psychometric properties such as content validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability. Material/Methods Our study was conducted in 2 parts. In the first part, we translated and adapted the VADL from English into Arabic with expert input. In the second part, we tested the translated scale content validity by consulting 6 experts in the field. We assessed the scale’s internal consistency and test-retest reliability by administering it twice to 31 subjects with vestibular disorders with a 1-week interval between the 2 measurements. Results Translation, adaptation, and pretesting were successful, and we were able to create the VADL-A, an Arabic version of the VADL. The content validity of the VADL-A was 0.96, internal consistency was 0.96, and the test-retest reliability was 0.93. Conclusions We successfully translated, adapted, and created the VADL-A. Our preliminary testing of basic psychometric properties indicated that the scale has excellent content validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability.
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