TY - JOUR
T1 - Cross-cultural validation of an international questionnaire, the General Measure of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale (FACT-G), for Japanese
AU - Fumimoto, H.
AU - Kobayashi, K.
AU - Chang, C. H.
AU - Eremenco, S.
AU - Fujiki, Y.
AU - Uemura, S.
AU - Ohashi, Y.
AU - Kudoh, S.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank all the patients who participated in this study. This study was supported by grants from Japan Research Foundation for Clinical Pharmacology and Eli Lilly Japan.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - The General Measure of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale (FACT-G) was developed in an English-speaking culture (USA). To determine if FACT-G could be used in Japan, a cross-cultural validation was performed. The Japanese version was created through an iterative forward-backward translation sequence used throughout the FACT multi-lingual translation project. In evaluating psychometric testing, its construct validity was investigated by factor analysis and multi-trait scaling analysis. Clinical validity was estimated by known-groups comparison using stage, performance score (PS) and patient location, and validated longitudinally by PS. The FACT-G (version 3) was given to 180 patients with lung cancer. Analyses showed that the scales of Physical, Functional, Emotional Well-Being, and Relationship with Doctors were constructively valid in Japan. Japanese patients felt that familial relationships were different than those with friends and neighbors, indicating that the Social/Family Well-Being scale needed cultural adaptation. Two items concerning coping with illness and acceptance of illness did not load predictably onto their respective scales and were considered to be cross-culturally problematic. However, clinical validity demonstrated its sensitivity. Japanese version 4 has been improved to address the weakness in an attempt to become an instrument that is applicable across cultures.
AB - The General Measure of the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy scale (FACT-G) was developed in an English-speaking culture (USA). To determine if FACT-G could be used in Japan, a cross-cultural validation was performed. The Japanese version was created through an iterative forward-backward translation sequence used throughout the FACT multi-lingual translation project. In evaluating psychometric testing, its construct validity was investigated by factor analysis and multi-trait scaling analysis. Clinical validity was estimated by known-groups comparison using stage, performance score (PS) and patient location, and validated longitudinally by PS. The FACT-G (version 3) was given to 180 patients with lung cancer. Analyses showed that the scales of Physical, Functional, Emotional Well-Being, and Relationship with Doctors were constructively valid in Japan. Japanese patients felt that familial relationships were different than those with friends and neighbors, indicating that the Social/Family Well-Being scale needed cultural adaptation. Two items concerning coping with illness and acceptance of illness did not load predictably onto their respective scales and were considered to be cross-culturally problematic. However, clinical validity demonstrated its sensitivity. Japanese version 4 has been improved to address the weakness in an attempt to become an instrument that is applicable across cultures.
KW - Cross-cultural comparison
KW - Japanese
KW - Lung carcinoma
KW - Quality of life
KW - Questionnaire
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0035709810&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1023/A:1013851216181
DO - 10.1023/A:1013851216181
M3 - Article
C2 - 11871591
AN - SCOPUS:0035709810
SN - 0962-9343
VL - 10
SP - 701
EP - 709
JO - Quality of Life Research
JF - Quality of Life Research
IS - 8
ER -