Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK.
Division of Pulmonology, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701, South Africa.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Jul 31;15(8):1615. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15081615.
Respiratory infections remain a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in many low and middle-income countries but non-communicable disease rates are rising fast. Prevalence studies have been primarily symptom-focused, with tools developed in countries in the Global North such as the United States and the United Kingdom. Systematic study in sub-Saharan African populations is necessary to accurately reflect disease risk factors present in these populations. We present tools for such studies, developed as part of the International Multidisciplinary Programme to Address Lung Health and TB in Africa ('IMPALA'), which includes lay representatives. At a preliminary meeting, the adequacy and suitability of existing tools was discussed and a new questionnaire set proposed. Individual questionnaires were developed, and an expert panel considered content and criterion validity. Questionnaires underwent a cross-cultural adaptation process, incorporating translation and contextual 'sense-checking', through the use of pre-established lay focus groups in Malawi, before consensus-approval by project collaborators. The complete set of research questionnaires, providing information on lung health symptoms and a relevant range of potential risk factors for lung disease, is now available online. In developing the tools, cultural and contextual insights were important, as were translational considerations. The process benefitted from a foundation in expert knowledge, starting with validated tools and internationally respected research groups, and from a coordinated collaborative approach. We present and discuss a newly devised, contextually appropriate set of questionnaires for non-communicable lung disease research in Africa that are now available in open access for all to use.
在许多低收入和中等收入国家,呼吸道感染仍然是发病率和死亡率的主要原因,但非传染性疾病的发病率增长迅速。流行性病学研究主要集中在症状上,使用的工具是在北美国家(如美国和英国)开发的。在撒哈拉以南非洲人群中进行系统研究对于准确反映这些人群中存在的疾病风险因素是必要的。我们提出了一些工具来进行此类研究,这些工具是非洲肺部健康和结核病国际多学科项目(IMPALA)的一部分,其中包括非专业代表。在初步会议上,讨论了现有工具的充分性和适用性,并提出了一套新的问卷。制定了单独的问卷,并由一个专家小组考虑内容和标准效度。问卷经过跨文化适应过程,通过在马拉维预先建立的非专业焦点小组,结合翻译和上下文“感知检查”,然后由项目合作者达成共识批准。现在可以在网上获得一套完整的研究问卷,提供有关肺部健康症状和一系列与肺部疾病相关的潜在风险因素的信息。在开发这些工具时,文化和背景知识非常重要,翻译考虑也是如此。该过程得益于专家知识的基础,从经过验证的工具和国际上受尊敬的研究小组开始,并得益于协调一致的合作方法。我们提出并讨论了一套新设计的、适应当地情况的问卷,用于非洲的非传染性肺部疾病研究,现在可以公开获取,供所有人使用。