2003
DOI: 10.1097/01.blo.0000068361.47147.79
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Greek Versions of the Oswestry and Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaires

Abstract: Disability questionnaires are increasingly used for clinical assessment, outcome measurement of treatment and research methodology of low back pain. Their use in different countries and cultural groups must follow certain guidelines for translation and cross-cultural adaptation. The translation of such an instrument must be tested for its reliability and validity to be applied and to allow comparability of data. The Oswestry Disability Index and the Roland-Morris Disability Questionnaire are two disability que… Show more

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Cited by 85 publications
(61 citation statements)
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“…It has good sensitivity to change and is therefore a good tool for measuring outcomes of physical therapy in patients with chronic non-specific low back pain. The Slovene ODI demonstrated good reliability (internal consistency), which is in accordance with the results of the original study (12) and other investigations (20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It has good sensitivity to change and is therefore a good tool for measuring outcomes of physical therapy in patients with chronic non-specific low back pain. The Slovene ODI demonstrated good reliability (internal consistency), which is in accordance with the results of the original study (12) and other investigations (20)(21)(22)(23)(24)(25).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…A good correlation with VAS, EQ-5D and EQ-VAS in both interviews indicates good criterion-related validity (concurrent validity) of the Slovene ODI. A good correlation with VAS was reported also in other studies, with correlation coefficients ranging from 0.62 to 0.82 (17,24,26,27). We found no reports on the correlation between EQ-5D and ODI.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…For the whole scale the Cronbach's alpha was 0.90, which is higher than the majority of coefficients previously reported (0.76 [28]; 0.77 [20]; 0.83 [10]; 0.94 [23]). Cronbach's alphas greater than 0.8 are generally recommended for psychometric scales [36], although for individual patient assessments in the clinical situation, an alpha coefficient of at least 0.9 is recommended [7].…”
Section: Internal Consistency Of the Odicontrasting
confidence: 63%
“…Convergent validity was examined by investigating the strength of the relationship between the ODI and various other indices of disability (RM score and Likert scale ratings) and LBP intensity. The ODI showed a somewhat higher correlation with the RM (r=0.80) than has been previously reported {r=0.66 (LBP patients with radicular pain), r=0.72 (low back sprain) [30]; r=0.73 [10]}. However, it was noticed that extrapolation of the regression equation for the relationship between ODI and RM, to a maximum RM score (24 points), yielded an ODI score of just 70 points.…”
Section: Construct Validity Of the Odimentioning
confidence: 53%
“…The Oswestry Disability Index (ODI) [12,13] and the Quebec Back Pain Disability Scale (QDS) [14,15] are two reliable, valid and widely used PROMs in spine care that have been validated for use with numerous languages since first being reported in English. Validation studies of the Spanish [16], French-Canadian [17], Danish [18], Chinese [19,20], German [21], Korean [22], Polish [23], Italian [24], Persian [25], Finnish [26], Turkish [27], Brazilian-Portuguese [28], Norwegian [29] and Greek [30] versions of the ODI have all been published. Nine validation studies on national versions of the QDS (Greek [31], Turkish [32], Polish [23], Persian [25], Portuguese [33], Korean [34], Dutch [35], French [36] and Arabic [37]) have been reported so far.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%