Last update:

   29-Nov-2023
 

Arch Hellen Med, 40(6), November-December 2023, 833-838

ORIGINAL PAPER

Cross-cultural adaptation of the Exercise Adherence Rating Scale for Greek older adults

M. Tsekoura,1 A. Papadopoulou,2 V. Sakellari3
1Department of Physiotherapy, School of Health Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Patras, Rio, Greece
2Independent researcher, Patra, Greece
3Department of Physiotherapy, Faculty of Health and Care Sciences, University of West Attica, Athens, Greece

OBJECTIVE To adapt the Exercise Adherence Rating Scale (EARS) into Greek and evaluate its measurement properties in community-dwelling older adults.

METHOD Thirty-five older adults between 61 and 86 years (24 women, 11 men; mean age 72.45±6.4 years) were enrolled in this study. Permission for the cross-cultural adaptation was received from the developer of the EARS. Cross-cultural adaptation of the EARS was performed based on Beaton guidelines (forward translation, synthesis, back translation, expert committee review, and pre-testing). Participants were oriented on undertaking the prescribed home-based exercise program in the first session, and adherence behavior was assessed after one week, and finally reassessed after two weeks (test-retest reliability). Six weeks after the first assessment, they were invited again to fill the EARS for responsiveness. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC2,1) and Cronbach's α were used to assess test-retest reliability and internal consistency. The minimum detectable change (MDC) for each measure was calculated to quantify intervention effects.

RESULTS The Greek version of the EARS questionnaire (EARS-GR) was translated without major difficulties. The forward and back translation revealed no content or language-related issues. Results showed high internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha of 0.92) and excellent test-retest reliability (ICC=0.9, 95% confidence interval [CI]=0.81–0.95) for 6-item adherence behavior.

CONCLUSIONS The EARS-GR was cross-culturally adapted into Greek and was found comprehensible and reliable and may, thus, be used across Greek-speaking clinical settings and research. Further studies are recommended to investigate other psychometric properties of the EARS-GR with a larger sample, including various diseases.

Key words: Adaptation, Adherence, Exercise, Older adults, Reliability.


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