TY - JOUR
T1 - The translation-validation of the sense of coherence scale into Greek and its use in primary health care
AU - Karalis, I.
AU - Langius, A.
AU - Tsirogianni, M.
AU - Faresjö, T.
AU - Nettelbladt, P.
AU - Lionis, C.
PY - 2004/3
Y1 - 2004/3
N2 - OBJECTIVE: Aaron Antonovsky's Sense of Coherence (SOC) theory tries to explain why some people manage stress and stay well while others break down. According to Antonovsky, a strong SOC helps a person see the world as consistent and predictable (comprehensible), problems as manageable and the challenges of life as worth making commitments for (meaningful). This article discusses the procedure of translation and cultural adaptation of the scale into the Greek language. METHOD: The SOC scale consists of 29 items; respondents are asked to select a response, on a seven-point semantic differential scale with two anchoring phrases. The higher the total score, the stronger SOC it represents for the respondent. The translation and adaptation of the scale for the Greek language was made according to the Minimal Translation Criteria approved by the board of Trust's Scientific Advisory Committee. The bilingual translation (forward-backward) of the scale was followed by pilot testing in 6 volunteers. In its final form, the test-retest reliability (reproducibility) of the translated scale was tested in a group of 22 people (13 women, 9 men). RESULTS: The procedure of translation, validation and cultural adaptation of the questionnaire into the Greek language and the findings of the validation process of the Greek version are described. The final form of the questionnaire, as this resulted from the described process is presented. The Spearman correlation of the scores that 22 subjects provided when invited to complete the SOC twice with an interval of 6 weeks (test-retest reliability) was high (r=0.859). CONCLUSIONS: It is anticipated that the wider use of SOC might contribute to the further development of research in the field of primary care and public health.
AB - OBJECTIVE: Aaron Antonovsky's Sense of Coherence (SOC) theory tries to explain why some people manage stress and stay well while others break down. According to Antonovsky, a strong SOC helps a person see the world as consistent and predictable (comprehensible), problems as manageable and the challenges of life as worth making commitments for (meaningful). This article discusses the procedure of translation and cultural adaptation of the scale into the Greek language. METHOD: The SOC scale consists of 29 items; respondents are asked to select a response, on a seven-point semantic differential scale with two anchoring phrases. The higher the total score, the stronger SOC it represents for the respondent. The translation and adaptation of the scale for the Greek language was made according to the Minimal Translation Criteria approved by the board of Trust's Scientific Advisory Committee. The bilingual translation (forward-backward) of the scale was followed by pilot testing in 6 volunteers. In its final form, the test-retest reliability (reproducibility) of the translated scale was tested in a group of 22 people (13 women, 9 men). RESULTS: The procedure of translation, validation and cultural adaptation of the questionnaire into the Greek language and the findings of the validation process of the Greek version are described. The final form of the questionnaire, as this resulted from the described process is presented. The Spearman correlation of the scores that 22 subjects provided when invited to complete the SOC twice with an interval of 6 weeks (test-retest reliability) was high (r=0.859). CONCLUSIONS: It is anticipated that the wider use of SOC might contribute to the further development of research in the field of primary care and public health.
KW - Cross cultural adaptation and validation
KW - Primary health care
KW - Sense of coherence scale
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=2342663179&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:2342663179
SN - 1105-3992
VL - 21
SP - 195
EP - 203
JO - Archives of Hellenic Medicine
JF - Archives of Hellenic Medicine
IS - 2
ER -