Abstract

BackgroundThe Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit was developed to measure outcomes of social care in England. In this study, we translated the four level self-completion version (SCT-4) of the ASCOT for use in the Netherlands and performed a cross-cultural validation.MethodsThe ASCOT SCT-4 was translated into Dutch following international guidelines, including two forward and back translations. The resulting version was pilot tested among frail older adults using think-aloud interviews. Furthermore, using a subsample of the Dutch ACT-study, we investigated test-retest reliability and construct validity and compared response distributions with data from a comparable English study.ResultsThe pilot tests showed that translated items were in general understood as intended, that most items were reliable, and that the response distributions of the Dutch translation and associations with other measures were comparable to the original English version. Based on the results of the pilot tests, some small modifications and a revision of the Dignity items were proposed for the final translation, which were approved by the ASCOT development team. The complete original English version and the final Dutch translation can be obtained after registration on the ASCOT website (http://www.pssru.ac.uk/ascot).ConclusionsThis study provides preliminary evidence that the Dutch translation of the ASCOT is valid, reliable and comparable to the original English version. We recommend further research to confirm the validity of the modified Dutch ASCOT translation.

Highlights

  • The Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit was developed to measure outcomes of social care in England

  • The response distributions obtained in the pilot tests of the Dutch translation of the Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit (ASCOT) in the Adults: Care in Transition’ (ACT) study were compared to the response distributions using the original English version in a similar sample in England from the ‘Identifying the Impact of Adult Social Care’ (IIASC) study

  • The back translations revealed some additional deviations from the original English version

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Summary

Introduction

The Adult Social Care Outcomes Toolkit was developed to measure outcomes of social care in England. In (economic) evaluations of health services, outcome measures traditionally focus on the impact of the health service on health. Examples of such instruments are the EuroQol five-dimensional questionnaire (EQ-5D) [7] and the Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) [8]. There have been several initiatives in the last years to develop instruments that can be used to measure outcomes of care services that not directly aim to improve health. The Adult Social Care Outcomes van Leeuwen et al Health and Quality of Life Outcomes (2015) 13:56

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