PeerJ (Nov 2021)

Studying suicide using proxy-based data: reliability and validity of a short version scale for measuring quality of life in rural China

  • Huiming He,
  • Qiqing Mo,
  • Xinyu Bai,
  • Xinguang Chen,
  • Cunxian Jia,
  • Liang Zhou,
  • Zhenyu Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12396
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. e12396

Abstract

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Background To evaluate the reliability and validity of the short version six-item Quality of Life Scale (QOLS-6) and the consistency of subject-proxy data in a case-control psychological autopsy study on elderly suicide in rural China. Methods A two-stage stratified cluster sampling method was used to select research sites. We used self-administered questionnaires to collect proxy-based information from informants and subject-based information from living comparisons. Results A total of 242 pairs of suicide cases and living comparisons were selected in our research. Subject-proxy consistency for QOLS-6 was good (Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was 0.688) in living controls. Good internal consistency of QOLS-6 was validated by Cronbach’s α being greater than 0.6 among suicide cases and living comparisons. The mean scores of quality of life were lower among suicide cases than living controls. Quality of life was negatively correlated with depression, loneliness, hopelessness, impulsiveness and stressful life events, while it was positively correlated with activities of daily living and family function. Conclusions QOLS-6 has good reliability and validity, which can be used for assessing quality of life among Chinese rural older adults. It is shorter and easier than any other scale for measuring quality of life and can be used as a screening tool in future studies.

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