Download PDF Download PDF

Burns

Publication date: 2015-01-01
Volume: 41 Pages: 1333 - 1339
Publisher: Butterworths

Author:

Müller, Astrid
Smits, Dirk ; Jasper, Stefanie ; Berg, Lea ; Claes, Laurence ; Ipaktchi, Ramin ; Vogt, Peter ; de Zwaan, Martina

Keywords:

Burn Specific Health Scale-Brief, health related quality of life, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, validity, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Critical Care Medicine, Dermatology, Surgery, General & Internal Medicine, German Burn Specific Health Scale-Brief, Health-related quality of life, Hospital Anxiety and Depression, Scale, Reliability, Validity, SURVIVORS, MORBIDITY, Adult, Affect, Aged, Anxiety, Burns, Depression, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Health Status, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survivors, Translations, Trauma Severity Indices, 1103 Clinical Sciences, Emergency & Critical Care Medicine, 3202 Clinical sciences, 4201 Allied health and rehabilitation science

Abstract:

Background: The Burn Specific Health Scale-Brief (BSHS-B) is recognized as a valid selfrating scale to evaluate quality of life after burn injury. Aim: To validate the translated German version of the BSHS-B. Method: 141 burn survivors (65.2% men) with a mean age of 49.62 years (SD=15.16) and a mean duration after burn injury of 45.01 months (SD=26.18) answered the BSHS-B. Factor structure was tested by using confirmatory factor analysis, reliability (internal consistency) of the scales was determined by means of Cronbach‟s α. Construct validity was explored through correlations between the BSHS-B and the Short-Form 8 Health Survey (SF-8), and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). In addition, the know-groups technique was used to determine to which degree the BSHS-B discriminates between patients with low and high burn severity based on the abbreviated burn severity index (ABSI). Results: The nine BSHS-B subscales showed good internal consistency. A second-order confirmatory factor analysis revealed the following main components: (1) Affect and Relationship, (2) Function and (3) Skin Involvement. The second-order factors were positively correlated with the SF-8 and negatively correlated with symptoms of anxiety and depression. Patients with low ABSI scored higher on all three BSHS-B domains than those with high ABSI. Conclusions: The results indicate good psychometric properties of the German BSHS-B. Further studies are needed to investigate the utility of the questionnaire in clinical routine practice, evaluation of burn management programs, and burn-specific research.