Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research (Jul 2018)

Cross-cultural adaptation and validation of the VISA-A questionnaire for Chilean Spanish-speaking patients

  • Andres Keller,
  • Pablo Wagner,
  • Guillermo Izquierdo,
  • Jorge Cabrolier,
  • Nathaly Caicedo,
  • Emilio Wagner,
  • Nicola Maffulli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-018-0882-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background The purpose of this study is to translate, culturally adapt, and validate the VISA-A questionnaire for Chilean Spanish speakers with Achilles tendinopathy (AT), which has been originally developed for English-speaking population. Methods According to the guidelines published by Beaton et al., the questionnaire was translated and culturally adapted to Chilean patients in six steps: initial translation, synthesis of the translation, back translation, expert committee review, test of the pre-final version (cohort n = 35), and development of VISA-A-CH. The resulting Chilean version was tested for validity on 60 patients: 20 healthy individuals (group 1), 20 patients with a recently diagnosed AT (group 2), and 20 with a severe AT that already initiated conservative treatment with no clinical improvement (group 3). The questionnaire was completed three times by each participant: at the time of study enrollment, after an hour, and after a week of the initial test. Results All six steps were successfully completed for the translation and cultural adaptation of the VISA-A-CH. VISA-A-CH final mean scores in the healthy group was significantly higher than those in the other groups. Group 3 had the lowest scores. Validity showed excellent test-retest reliability (rho c = 0.999; Pearson’s r = 1.000) within an hour and within a week (rho c = 0.837; Pearson’s r = 0.840). Conclusions VISA-A was translated and validated to Chilean Spanish speakers successfully, being comparable to the original version. We believe that VISA-A-CH can be recommended as an important tool for clinical and research settings in Chilean and probably Latin-American Spanish speakers.

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