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Development of the World Health Organization WHOQOL-BREF quality of life assessment. The WHOQOL Group.

J Orley, +1 more
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TLDR
It is envisaged that the WHOQOL-BREF will be most useful in studies that require a brief assessment of quality oflife, for example, in large epidemiological studies and clinical trials where quality of life is of interest.
Abstract
Background. The paper reports on the development of the WHOQOL-BREF, an abbreviated version of the WHOQOL-100 quality of life assessment. Method. The WHOQOL-BREF was derived from data collected using the WHOQOL-100. It produces scores for four domains related to quality of life: physical health, psychological, social relationships and environment. It also includes one facet on overall quality of life and general health. Results. Domain scores produced by the WHOQOL-BREF correlate highly (0.89 or above) with WHOQOL-100 domain scores (calculated on a four domain structure). WHOQOL-BREF domain scores demonstrated good discriminant validity, content validity, internal consistency and test-retest reliability. Conclusion. These data suggest that the WHOQOL-BREF provides a valid and reliable alternative to the assessment of domain profiles using the WHOQOL-100. It is envisaged that the WHOQOL-BREF will be most useful in studies that require a brief assessment of quality of life, for example, in large epidemiological studies and clinical trials where quality of life is of interest. In addition, the WHOQOL-BREF may be of use to health professionals in the assessment and evaluation of treatment efficacy. [References: 9]

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A Brief Instrument to Assess Both Burnout and Professional Fulfillment in Physicians: Reliability and Validity, Including Correlation with Self-Reported Medical Errors, in a Sample of Resident and Practicing Physicians

TL;DR: PFI scales have good performance characteristics including sensitivity to change and offer a novel contribution by assessing professional fulfillment in addition to burnout and correlated in expected directions with sleep-related impairment, depression, anxiety, and WHOQOL-BREF scores.
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Critical Review of Generic and Dermatology-Specific Health-Related Quality of Life Instruments

TL;DR: The selection of the appropriate HRQOL instrument remains a trade-off between various psychometric properties and research objectives, for now, the combination of SF-36 and Skindex-29 are recommended as the instruments of choice in dermatology.
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Trajectories of resilience, depression, and anxiety following spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: Overall, the majority of SCI patients demonstrated considerable psychological resilience, and models for depression and anxiety evidenced a pattern of elevated symptoms followed by improvement and a patterns of delayed symptoms.
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The WHO quality of life assessment instrument (WHOQOL-Bref): The importance of its items for cross-cultural research

TL;DR: Most items were rated as more important by women compared to men and by younger compared to older persons, and rank orders of item for their importance showed highly significant correlations between centres.
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Teststatistische Prüfung und Normierung der deutschen Versionen des EUROHIS-QOL Lebensqualität-Index und des WHO-5 Wohlbefindens-Index

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the teststatistische Prufung and normierung der deutschen version of the EUROHIS-QOL 8 Item Index (EUROHISQOL) zur Erfassung der generischen Lebensqualitat and des Wohlbefindens-Index der WHO (WHO-5) zu Erfassoung der Wohbefinden aus Sicht der Befragten.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A 12-Item Short-Form Health Survey: Construction of Scales and Preliminary Tests of Reliability and Validity

TL;DR: Twenty cross-sectional and longitudinal tests of empirical validity previously published for the 36-item short-form scales and summary measures were replicated for the 12-item Physical Component Summary and the12-item Mental Component Summary, including comparisons between patient groups known to differ or to change in terms of the presence and seriousness of physical and mental conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The world health organization quality of life assessment (WHOQOL) - position paper from the world health organization

TL;DR: The World Health Organization's project to develop a quality of life instrument (the WHOQOL) is described, the reasons that the project was undertaken, the thinking that underlies the project, the method that has been followed in its development and the current status of the project.
Journal ArticleDOI

The World Health Organization Quality of Life Assessment (WHOQOL): development and general psychometric properties.

TL;DR: The steps are presented from the development of the initial pilot version of the instrument to the field trial version, the so-called WHOQOL-100, which has been developed collaboratively in a number of centres in diverse cultural settings over several years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Performance of a five-item mental health screening test

TL;DR: TheMHI-5 was as good as the MHI-18 and the GHQ-30, and better than the SSI-28, for detecting most significant DIS disorders, including major depression, affective disorders generally, and anxiety disorders.
BookDOI

Quality of life assessment : international perspectives

John Orley, +1 more
TL;DR: The development of Cross-Cultural Quality of Life Assessment Instruments and Ensuring International Equivalence of quality of Life Measures: Problems and Approaches to Solutions.
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Who quality of lie-bref?

The paper discusses the development of the WHOQOL-BREF, an abbreviated version of the WHOQOL-100 quality of life assessment.