Abstract

BackgroundThe International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership aims to study international differences in cancer survival and the possible causes. Participating countries are Australia, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and the UK and a particular focus area is differences in awareness and beliefs about cancer. In this connection, the Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer (ABC) measure has been translated into multiple languages. The aim of this study is to appraise the translation process and measurement properties of the Danish version of the ABC measure.MethodsThe translation process included forward and backward translations and a pilot-test. Data quality was assessed using survey data from 3000 Danish respondents and content validity indexes were calculated based on judgments from ten academic researchers. Construct validity was determined by a confirmative factor analysis (CFA) and exploratory factor analyses (EFA) using survey data and a known group comparison analysis including 56 persons. Test-retest reliability was assessed based on responses from 123 person whom completed the interview twice with an interval of 2–3 weeks.ResultsThe translation process resulted in a Danish ABC measure conceptually equivalent to the English ABC measure. Data quality was acceptable in relation to non-response to individual items which was maximum 0.3%, but the percentage of respondents answering ‘don’t know’ was above 3% for 16 out of 48 items. Content validity indexes showed that items adequately reflected and represented the constructs to be measured (item content validity indexes: 0.9–1.0; construct content validity indexes: 0.8–1.0). The hypothesised factor structure could not be replicated by a CFA, but EFA on each individual subscale showed that six out of seven subscales were unidimensional. The ABC measure discriminated well between non-medical academics and medical academics, but had some difficulties in discriminating between educational groups. Test–retest reliability was moderate to substantial for most items.ConclusionsThe Danish ABC measure is a useful measurement that is accepted and understood by the target group and with accepted measurement criteria for content validity and test-retest reliability. Future studies may further explore the factorial structure of the ABC measure and should focus on improving the response categories.

Highlights

  • The International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership aims to study international differences in cancer survival and the possible causes

  • Translation To achieve a Danish version conceptually equivalent to the English about Cancer (ABC) measure the translation was conducted in agreement with the guidelines for translation procedures suggested by de Vet et al [9]

  • Translation Final version The comprehensive translation procedures resulted in a Danish ABC measure that was found to be conceptually equivalent to the English ABC measure

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Summary

Introduction

The International Cancer Benchmarking Partnership aims to study international differences in cancer survival and the possible causes. Participating countries are Australia, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Denmark and the UK and a particular focus area is differences in awareness and beliefs about cancer. In this connection, the Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer (ABC) measure has been translated into multiple languages. A particular focus area is differences in awareness and beliefs about cancer, as a possible contributor to the observed differences in cancer survival. In this connection, the Awareness and Beliefs about Cancer (ABC) measure was developed [4], which is an extension of the Cancer Awareness Measure (CAM) [5]. The measurement aim of the ABC measure is discriminative, to differentiate between countries and socio-economic groups in terms of awareness and beliefs about cancer

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