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1
A physician-initiated intervention to increase colorectal cancer screening in Chinese patients.
In: Cancer, vol 124 Suppl 7, iss Suppl 7 (2018)
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2
A physician-initiated intervention to increase colorectal cancer screening in Chinese patients.
Sun, Angela; Tsoh, Janice Y; Tong, Elisa K. - : eScholarship, University of California, 2018
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3
A Breast Cancer Education Program for D/deaf Women.
In: American annals of the deaf, vol 163, iss 2 (2018)
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4
Adaptation of a Cancer Clinical Trials Education Program for African American and Latina/o Community Members.
In: Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education, vol 43, iss 4 (2016)
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5
Exercise for improving age-related hyperkyphotic posture: a systematic review.
In: Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, vol 95, iss 1 (2014)
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6
Support from hospital to home for elders: a randomized trial.
In: Annals of internal medicine, vol 161, iss 7 (2014)
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7
Making a decision about trial participation: the feasibility of measuring deliberation during the informed consent process for clinical trials.
In: Symplectic Elements at Oxford ; Europe PubMed Central ; PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) ; Web of Science (Lite) (http://apps.webofknowledge.com/summary.do) ; Scopus (http://www.scopus.com/home.url) ; CrossRef ; ORA review team (2014)
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8
Cross-cultural adaptation into Punjabi of the English version of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale
Abstract: This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record. ; BACKGROUND: We wanted to use a Punjabi version of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) to enable non-English speaking patients to participate in a clinical trial. The aim of the study was to translate and validate the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale into Punjabi. METHODS: The HADS was translated into Punjabi by a multidisciplinary team, verified against the original version, and administered to 73 bilingual patients attending an outpatient clinic. RESULTS: One sample t-tests and the Bland-Altman plots demonstrated acceptable linguistic agreement between the two versions of the HADS. Spearman's rank-order correlation coefficients (p < 0.0001) demonstrate excellent conceptual agreement between each item and its corresponding subscale score, for both versions. Concordance rates revealed that the Punjabi HADS adequately identified borderline cases of anxiety (80.8%), definite cases of anxiety (91.8%) and depression (91.8%), but was less reliable in identifying borderline cases of depression (65.8%). Cronbach alpha coefficients revealed high levels of internal consistency for both the Punjabi and English versions (0.81 and 0.86 for anxiety and 0.71 and 0.85 for depression, respectively). CONCLUSION: The Punjabi HADS is an acceptable, reliable and valid measure of anxiety and depression among physically ill Punjabi speaking people in the United Kingdom. ; The BRUM study is funded by the NHS HTA Programme.
Keyword: Adult; Anxiety; Clinical Trials as Topic; Cross-Cultural Comparison; Depression; Female; Humans; India; Language; Male; Middle Aged; Psychiatric Status Rating Scales; Reproducibility of Results
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10871/31661
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-7-5
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