Abstract

To present the translated and linguistic and culturally adapted version of the Short self-regulation Questionnaire (SSRQ) for the Brazilian Portuguese and to check its applicability to patients with dysphonia. The SSRQ is a tool used to evaluate the ability to self-regulate behavior; it has 31 items and generates three scores: total index of individual self-regulation capacity and partial scores for goal setting and impulse control. Each item should be scored by means of a Likert-type 5-point scale; the total score ranges from 29 to 145 points. The original instrument was translated and culturally adapted to Brazilian Portuguese by two English-speaking speech therapists who combined their translations and made linguistic adjustments to compose a single final version. This version was back-translated by a third speech therapist with experience in validation studies and without knowledge of the original instrument. The translation and the back-translation were compared with each other and with the original English version by five speech therapists that reached a consensus on additional changes. In this way, the final version was produced. This was called "Questionário Reduzido de Autorregulação" (QRAR). The QRAR was applied to 45 randomly chosen subjects with and without dysphonia in a teaching clinic. No item had to be eliminated, since the respondents did not find it difficult to indicate their answers. The "Questionário Reduzido de Autorregulação" (QRAR) has been successfully translated and culturally and linguistically adapted to Brazilian and Portuguese and can be applied to individuals with voice problems.

Highlights

  • Abusive behavior is linked to many health problems, such as cigarette smoking(1), consumption of psychoactive substances like alcohol(2), obesity, non-adherence to physical exercise(3), sexual risk behaviors(4), among others

  • It is understood that the use of voice has a more relevant role in behavioral dysphonia, in which patients present vocal difficulties related to abusive behaviors and/or inadequate vocal tract adjustments

  • It is important to increase the knowledge about cognitive responses and behavioral characteristics of patients, such as associative learning, motivation and regulation of emotion, which may be linked to the genesis and maintenance of dysphonia, especially of the behavioral nature

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Abusive behavior is linked to many health problems, such as cigarette smoking(1), consumption of psychoactive substances like alcohol(2), obesity, non-adherence to physical exercise(3), sexual risk behaviors(4), among others. It is understood that the use of voice has a more relevant role in behavioral dysphonia, in which patients present vocal difficulties related to abusive behaviors and/or inadequate vocal tract adjustments. It is important to increase the knowledge about cognitive responses and behavioral characteristics of patients, such as associative learning, motivation and regulation of emotion, which may be linked to the genesis and maintenance of dysphonia, especially of the behavioral nature. It is notable that self-regulation is an essential executive function managed by the prefrontal cortex of the frontal lobe of the brain to keep individuals active in the process of achieving goals. It is a complex phenomenon that involves behavior (activation, monitoring, inhibition, preservation and adaptation), emotions and cognitive strategies to achieve desired goals(5)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call