Proportionate translation of study materials and measures in a multinational global health trial: methodology development and implementation.

Journal: BMJ open

Volume: 12

Issue: 1

Year of Publication: 2022

Affiliated Institutions:  School of Health Sciences, Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK Ashleigh.charles@nottingham.ac.uk. Centre for Mental Health Law and Policy, Indian Law Society, Pune, Maharashtra, India. School of Medicine, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK. Department of Social Work, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er Sheva, Israel. Department of Psychiatry II, Ulm University, Ulm, Germany. Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany. Butabika National Referral Hospital, Kampala, Uganda. Department of Health Systems, Impact Evaluation and Policy, Ifakara Health Institute, Ifakara, Morogoro, United Republic of Tanzania. Centre for Global Mental Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK. School of Health Sciences, Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.

Abstract summary 

Current translation guidelines do not include sufficiently flexible translation approaches for different study materials. We aimed to develop a proportionate methodology to inform translation of all types of study materials in global health trials.The design included three stages: (1) categorisation of study materials, (2) integration of existing translation frameworks and (3) methodology implementation (Germany, India, Israel, Tanzania and Uganda) and refinement.The study population comprised 27 mental health service users and 27 mental health workers who were fluent in the local language in stage 7 (pretesting), and 54 bilingual mental health service users, aged 18 years or over, and able to give consent as judged by a clinician for step 9 (psychometric evaluation).The study took place in preparation for the Using Peer Support in Developing Empowering Mental Health Services (UPSIDES) randomised controlled trial (ISRCTN26008944).The primary outcome measure was the Social Inclusion Scale (SIS).The typology identifies four categories of study materials: local text, study-generated text, secondary measures and primary measure. The UPSIDES Proportionate Translation Methodology comprises ten steps: preparation, forward translation, reconciliation, back translation, review, harmonisation, pretesting, finalisation, psychometric evaluation and dissemination. The translated primary outcome measure for the UPSIDES Trial (SIS) demonstrated adequate content validity (49.3 vs 48.5, p=0.08), convergent validity and internal consistency (0.73), with minimal floor/ceiling effects.This methodology can be recommended for translating, cross-culturally adapting and validating all study materials, including standardised measures, in future multisite global trials. The methodology is particularly applicable to multi-national studies involving sites with differing resource levels. The robustness of the psychometric findings is limited by the sample sizes for each site. However, making this limitation explicit is preferable to the typical practice of not reporting adequate details about measure translation and validation.ISRCTN26008944.

Authors & Co-authors:  Charles Ashleigh A Korde Palak P Newby Chris C Grayzman Alina A Hiltensperger Ramona R Mahlke Candelaria C Moran Galia G Nakku Juliet J Niwemuhwezi Jackie J Nixdorf Rebecca R Paul Eva E Puschner Bernd B Ramesh Mary M Ryan Grace Kathryn GK Shamba Donat D Kalha Jasmine J Slade Mike M

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  Theobald S, Brandes N, Gyapong M, et al. . Implementation research: new imperatives and opportunities in global health. Lancet 2018;392:2214–28. 10.1016/S0140-6736(18)32205-0
Authors :  17
Identifiers
Doi : e058083
SSN : 2044-6055
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Adolescent
Other Terms
MENTAL HEALTH;PSYCHIATRY;STATISTICS & RESEARCH METHODS
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Uganda
Publication Country
England