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Quality of Life in rural and urban populations in Lebanon using SF-36 Health Survey

Abstract

Background

Measuring health status in a population is important for the evaluation of interventions and the prediction of health and social care needs. Quality of life (QoL) studies are an essential complement to medical evaluation but most of the tools available in this area are in English. In order to evaluated QoL in rural and urban areas in Lebanon, the short form 36 health survey (SF-36) was adapted into Arabic.

Methods

SF-36 was administered in a cross-sectional study, to collect sociodemographic and environmental variables as well as self reported morbidity. We analysed a representative sample containing 1632 subjects, from whom we randomly picked 524 subjects aged 14 years and over. The translation, cultural adaptation and validation of the SF-36 followed the International Quality of Life Assessment methodology. Multivariate analysis (generalized linear model) was performed to test the effect of habitat (rural on urban areas) on all domains of the SF-36.

Results

The rate of missing data is very low (0.23% of items). Item level validation supported the assumptions underlying Likert scoring. SF-36 scale scores showed wide variability and acceptable internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha >0.70), factor analysis yielded patterns of factor correlation comparable to that found in the U.S.A and France. Patients resident in rural areas had higher vitality scores than those in urban areas. Older people reported more satisfaction with some domains of life than younger people, except for physical functioning. The QoL of women is poorer than men; certain symptoms and morbidity independently influence the domains of SF-36 in this population.

Conclusion

The results support the validity of the SF-36 Arabic version. Habitat has a minor influence on QoL, women had a poor QoL, and health problems had differential impact on QoL.

Background

Measuring health status in a population is important for the evaluation of interventions and the prediction of health and social care needs. The traditional measures of mortality and morbidity, although useful, have nonetheless certain limitations [1]. It goes beyond direct manifestations of illness to study the patient's personal morbidity, that is to say, the various effects that illness and treatments have on daily life and life satisfaction [2]. Indeed, it is now widely acknowledged, in terms of health, that decisions must take into consideration the subject's point of view and his inner feelings towards the experiences he has lived through, i.e. his quality of life (QoL) [3].

Whether or not individuals seek medical attention is less dependent on the "objective" presence of symptoms than on their response to these, or to their general perception that something is wrong with them. Such differences in perception affect utilization of health services to the degree that one individual may seek medical advice while another may not [4] and as health promotion is the process of helping people take control of, and improve their health, changing people's expectations of health is a core element of health promotion [5]. Hence, QoL studies are an essential complement to medical evaluation. QoL is a multi-faceted concept, which encompasses crucial areas such as physical health, psychological well being, social relationships, economic circumstances, personal beliefs and their relationships to salient features of the environment [6–10].

Several scales have been used to measure the different domains of Health Related Quality of Life (HRQL). Certain scales are generic such as the "Sickness Impact Profile" (SIP) [11–13], the "MOS 36 item Short Form Health Survey" (SF-36) [11][14–16], and the "Nottingham Health Profile" (NHP) [11, 12], while others are specific to a disease [4, 10][17–24], a particular function (e.g pain) or to a group of patients [25, 26]. The generic scales present the advantage of allowing us to compare the QoL of different populations and/or patients with a variety of diseases, while the specific scales are more sensitive to particular problems of a given population [27–29]. QoL tools must always be validated when used in a new environment [30], because the perception of QoL differs according to the individual situations [3, 28, 29, 31]. As most of the tools available in this area are in English, Arab countries are lagging considerably behind in this domain, not only in the development of tools, but also in terms of translation of existing material [12][17][32]. The SF-36 is the most widely used generic QoL instrument world wide because of its comprehensiveness, its brevity and its high standard of reliability and validity [14–16].

Lebanon is a small country (surface area 10,456 km2), in active transition characterized by changes in the mortality rate, an increase in life expectancy and the development of chronic diseases related to changes in environment and behavior [33]. Urbanization is one of the major consequences of the demographic transition (85% in 1996 vs. 60% in 1970) [34], which can be accompanied by a change in lifestyle and by the emergence of certain diseases [35]. Self reported indicators of health are increasingly used as valid indicators of morbidity and mortality within the general population, and as a complement to investigations based on medical examinations [36, 37]. Poor subjective perception of health is recognized as a predictor of increased risk of morbidity and mortality [38, 39]. In Lebanon, only two studies presented as a QoL survey have been performed: the first studied the well-being of households according to a subjective perception of their income [40]. The second evaluated the unsatisfied needs of Lebanese population according to the "Living Conditions Index" (LCI) [41].

In view of the lack of QoL instruments in Arabic, this paper presents and discusses the SF-36 adapted into Arabic in terms of applicability and subject acceptance, psychometric performance and validity; as well as the cross-sectional relationship with a selected lists of socioeconomic variables, and environmental variables, in particular the type of habitat (urban vs. rural area) and health variables.

Methods

Study design

From February 2000 to September 2000, we performed a cross-sectional, community-based survey of a random sample of the Lebanese population resident in the territory of South Lebanon (except occupied territory and Palestinian camps), with approximately 383000 residents participating, of whom 1/3 lived in urban areas.

The population base for the survey comes from the 1996 census [42] completed by the data of Mawla and al. [43]. The definition of urban and rural areas in Lebanon was defined in decree number 116 of June 12, 1959, and updated in May 2000 [44], making a distinction between cities and villages.

Sampling was performed randomly at five different levels: (1) the county, (2) the city (in urban areas) or the village (in rural areas), (3) the district, (4) the individual house, (5) the individual subject. In total, we selected 122 families in urban (U) and 244 families in rural (R) areas. This sample would allow us to detect a 10 point difference in SF-36 scores between groups with a fixed norm (a general population), assuming two-sided significance of 5%, with 80% power [15]. This led us to predict that 366 households would be necessary for the survey, taking into account the proportion of urban to rural residents. For each family, we allocated a substitute family, in case of refusal to participate.

At the level of the individual subjects, a random sample was taken within the families according to the number (n) of family members aged 14 years or more at the time of the survey: one person was selected if n < 4; two if 3 < n < 7 and three if n > 6.

Inclusion criteria were: age > 13 years at the time of the visit. Subjects resident in inaccessible areas, such as Palestinian camps and occupied territories in South Lebanon were excluded. Individuals unable to read the questionnaire who were also hard of hearing were excluded, as were very ill or hospitalized patients, severely mentally handicapped patients and subjects unable to understand Arabic.

Data collection

After identifying eligible subjects, the SF-36 was administered by self-administration or face-to-face interviews (for illiterate persons or those with other difficulties). After that, the interviewer conducted a standardized, structured interview using a pre-tested data collection form to collect information on demographics, socio-economic status (e.g. age, gender, education level, marital status, occupation, and Social Security coverage), environmental variables (religious culture and habitat), financial status (a measure of financial status rated from 1, very poor, to 5, very good, [6]). Other variables recorded were the occurence of a grave event during the previous year, satisfaction with work, and global quality of life assessment, which is a measure of the overall QoL status rated from 1 (poor) to 5 (very good). Health problems were measured with a list of common health problems (depression, rheumatic pains, lumbar pains, ...) [45]. A modified version of the Living Conditions Index "LCI-M" (unpublished data) was also assessed to evaluate unsatisfied basic needs in the households.

The SF-36 questionnaire was to be administered before the respondent is asked about other health questions and concurrent illnesses, so that any discussion of health problems does not influence the respondent's answers to the questionnaire.

Cultural Adaptation of the SF-36 into Arabic

The SF-36 is a generic questionnaire, widely used in various conditions and populations [14–16]. The SF-36 consists of 36 questions that are clustered to yield 8 health status scales: physical functioning (PF), Role-Physical (RP), Bodily Pain (BP), General Health (GH), Vitality (VT), Social Functioning (SF), Role-Emotional (RE), Mental Health (MH), Reported Health Transition (HT). Two summary measures aggregate these status scales, namely the Physical and Mental health summary scales. The SF-36 is suitable for self-administration, computerized administration, or administration by a trained interviewer in person or by telephone, to persons age 14 and older. The health concepts described by the SF-36 range in score from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating higher levels of function and/or better health. The subjects' responses are presented as a profile of scores calculated for each scale.

The translation and cultural adaptation of the SF-36 followed the International Quality of Life Assessment (IQOLA) methodology [46–48]. In the first phase, the SF-36 was translated by three bilingual individuals. All three were native Arabic speakers with excellent proficiency in English. Two individuals were graduate students at the American University. The third translator was a physican. Once the three translations were completed, discrepancies between them were resolved by a committee consisting of the translators and three further individuals not involved in the translation process (a sociologist and two epidemiologists). The committee created one unified translation of the SF-36. Because of the difficulties related to Arabic grammar and to the style of Arabic writing, two other Arabic linguistics experts also reviewed the translated version. Then, the Arabic version of the SF-36 was backtranslated by a native english speaker living in Lebanon, who was unaware of the original English language document. Once the backtranslation was completed the committee reconvened to review and resolve the discrepancies between the backtranslation and the original document. Finally, a pre-test was conducted with a group (30 subjects) of lay native Arabic speakers. For each item the group was asked to explain how it was understood. Overall, few problems were noted. Discrepancies were resolved by group consensus. The committee overseeing the translation process reviewed the final translation. Globally, the adaptation did not cause any particular problems. In view of cultural differences, certain items were modified in order to fit more closely into the context, consistent with the inherent norms of Lebanese society. Some expressions were modified to suit the context: for example, a mile, several blocks and one block were translated respectively by more than 1000 meters for long distances, a few hundred meters for moderate distances (200, 300, 500... meter) and less than 100 meters. On the other hand, both linguists and subjects understood "a good bit of the time" and "most of the time" identically in Arabic. "Bowling or playing golf" was translated to gardening or sport activities simply to represent moderately strenuous physical activities, in view of the differences in leisure traditions between both cultures. Finally, words relating to religious beliefs, such as "only God knows", (inchallah) were formulated for "I don't know". Indeed, some of the Lebanese subjects, in particular patients with chronic diseases, found that the questions related to general health were blasphemous, specifically item GH4: "I expect my health to get worse". This was viewed with scepticism, as the subjects maintained that they cannot predict, and that only God knows what lies in store for them. As for the items concerning social relations, some persons expressed the desire that a distinction be made between family relationships, relations with neighbours, and social relationships (i.e. with friends) due to the importance of the family in oriental traditions.

Statistical analysis

The characteristics of the respondents are described as means and standard deviations for quantitative variables. Qualitative variables are described as percentages and were compared with the chi squared test or Fisher's Exact test where appropriate.

Validation of the SF-36

We used the IQOLA project approach of item and scale level validation to assess the validity of the SF-36 Arabic version [15, 16][46–50]. Individual SF-36 items were recoded, summed and transformed, with missing values imputed as recommended [15]. Subjects with missing scale scores were excluded listwise from the analysis. All tests of significance were two-tailed.

Descriptive statistics

The mean and standard deviation (SD) for responses to each item and scale were calculated. The percentage of people with scores at the ceiling (percentage of subjects with a score of 100) and floor (lowest level) were calculated for each scale. On the scale level, ceiling and floor effects should be less than 20% in order to assume that the scale is capturing the full range of potential responses in the population [27].

Acceptability

The acceptability was tested by studying the percentage of refusals, the percentage of missing items, the percentage of complete questionnaires, the time taken to complete the questionnaire, as well as the acceptability questionnaire, which comprises the percentage of disturbing items, items that were hard to understand or confusing, and the willingness to fill out the questionnaire a second time.

Item level validity

The item level validity of the SF-36 would be supported if the following Likert scale scoring assumptions were fulfilled: (1) Items belonging to the same scale and measuring the same concept should show approximately the same means and standard deviations. (2) Each item in the scale should have the same correlation with the scale. (3) For item internal consistency, the correlation between items and the hypothesized scale should exceed 0.40. (4). For item discriminant validity, the correlation between each item and its hypothesized scale (corrected for overlap) should be higher than the correlation between that item and the other scales.

Scale level validity

Scale level validity would be supported if the SF-36 scores showed substantial variability (measuring the entire spectrum of the hypothesized domain for that scale); if the scales measuring disability (PF, RP, BP, SF, RE) had higher scores than the scales measuring well-being (GH, VT, MH); and if the reliability of scale scores estimated using internal consistency methods (Cronbach's alpha) was acceptable, namely 0.70 or higher for group comparisons [15][51, 52].

Structure validity of the SF-36

The internal consistency of each scale must be lower than the correlation between that scale and other scales if the SF-36 scales measure a distinct health concept [47]. Furthermore, scales measuring mental health (MH, RE, and SF) should be more substantially correlated with each other than with other SF-36 scales. Similarly, scales measuring physical health (PF, RP, and BP) should have higher correlation with each other than with other SF-36 scales.

Scale factor analyses were performed using eight scales. Principal component analysis with varimax rotation was carried out on correlation among scales to compare the factorial structure of data with that obtained from the American instrument [15, 16][50]. The hypothesized physical and mental domains of health underlying the SF-36 were identified on factor analysis. The validity of the SF-36 would be further supported if the PF, RP, and BP scales and MH, RE, and SF scales loaded on both domains of health respectively, and if the GH and VT scales loaded on both domains. The authors distinguish three situations: the average score from a scale is substantially correlated if factor loading is greater than 0.7, moderately correlated if factor loading is between 0.3 and 0.7, and slightly correlated if factor loading is less than 0.3 [15]. "Known groups" validity is a form of construct validity that measures the ability of an instrument to discriminate between groups of subjects who differ with regard to a relevant variable. Both convergent and discriminant validity can be tested [46]. The construct validity of the SF-36 would be supported if groups differing in factors known to affect QoL had SF-36 scores that varied according to a priori hypotheses [15][46].

The validity of known groups was computed by making the association between the sociodemographic parameters, financial status, occurrence of a grave event during the past year, satisfaction with work, global quality of life assessment, LCI-M, environmental variables and health problems. The significance of observed differences between groups was assessed using the Mann-Whitney U-test or Kruskal-Wallis 1-way analysis of variance tests of significance for non-normally distributed continuous variables.

Quality of life according to habitat

This validity of known groups makes it possible to evaluate at the same time the QoL according to habitat, i.e. urban vs. rural. Multivariate analysis was performed to test the effect of habitat on all domains of the SF-36. The adjustments were performed by generalized linear model (Proc GLM of SAS) according to the environment. The confusion variables taken into account were the following: age, gender, means of administration of SF-36, marital status, LCI-M, financial status, occurrence of a grave event during the past year, Global quality of life assessment and type of health problem.

Because of multiple testing, a P-values < 0.01 was considered to be significant. All data were recorded, and tabulated for analysis using the SPSS 7.5 for Windows statistical package. The GLM analysis was performed using SAS 8.2 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, U.S.A. 1999–2000).

Results

The majority of the population welcomed the study. Among the 366 households identified, 347 (94.8%) accepted to participate in the study, corresponding to 1632 persons. Of these, only 3 refused to participate, and a total of 524 persons completed the questionnaire.

Respondent characteristics

The characteristics of the respondents according to habitat are given in table 1. The population ranged in age from 14 to 86 years, with a mean age of 38.8 years (SD = 17.7, median = 36), and there was no difference between urban and rural populations (38 vs 39; p = 0.47). Women comprised almost two-thirds (61.6%) of the sample.

Table 1 Sociodemographic and environmental characteristics of the subjects.

48% were educated to primary level or lower, and 13.5% were illiterate, mostly in rural areas. University and higher level education comprised 10.7%. More than half (54.4%) of the population studied was not registered with the social security, and there was no significant difference between rural and urban environment in this regard. Regarding the perception of financial status, 26.5% reported a less than average (very poor and poor) status. Concerning satisfaction in work, 36% reported partial and total satisfaction. Nearly half (49%) of the population reported having experienced a serious event during the last 12 months, including death, divorce, separation, economic crisis and security status of the country. There was no difference here between the urban and rural populations, but there was a significant difference between women and men (respectively 53% vs. 43%; p = 0.037); 14% perceive their QoL (global index) as bad, with a significant disparity between urban and rural environments (respectively 14.5% vs 13.7%; p = 0.046). Concerning the LCI-M, it shows that 21% of households have a precarious standard of living. The factors most associated with this underprivileged status were level of education and profession. There was no difference between urban and rural after examination of the global index; although there was a difference in the level of education (p = 0.02) and the level of car possession (p = 0.02).

Validation of the SF-36

Acceptability of the SF-36 (table 2): No-one refused to answer the questions of the SF-36. In the sample of 524 respondents, the questionnaires were completed in 94.7% of cases. However, there was a significant difference between the number of self administered questionnaires and those administered by an interviewer (84.7% vs. 97.8%; p < 0.0001). The amount of missing data was very low, at only 0.23% of all answered items (3.4% of the questions had 1 missing item; 1.1% had 2–4 missing items), which indicates that the questionnaire had good acceptability. Nearly two thirds of the incomplete questionnaires had one missing item (18/28). The missing data were spread evenly over the different scales with a minimum of 0 and maximum 1%. 23% of the respondents self-administered the questionnaire. The average time of completion of the SF-36 was 8.4 minutes (SD = 2.9), with a minimum of 3 minutes (0.6% respondents) and a maximum of 20 minutes (0.6% respondents). Only 0.51% of the items were considered to be confusing. The three most frequently quoted items were: GH2 (I seem to get sick a little easier than other people), RP1 (Cut down the amount of time you spent on work or other activities) and SF2 (how much of the time has your physical health or emotional problems interfered with your social activities?). All respondents accepted to fill out the questionnaire for a second time.

Table 2 Description of scales, tests of item internal consistency and discriminant validity (N= 524).
Table 3 Reliability and interscale correlations of the SF-36 (Arabic version).

Item level analysis (table 2)

The item standard deviation tended to be comparable with few exceptions: the range of deviation for responses to questions in a given scale is 0.55 for PF, 0.21 for BP and GH, 0.16 for VT. It is 0.07 or less for the others.

Within each scale, the correlation between items and their hypothesized scale were roughly equal. Success rate (100%) was observed in tests of the item internal consistency and tests of item discriminant validity for all scales with the exception of the GH scale: Success rate in the test of item internal consistency was 80% (the correlation of the GH4 with hypothesized scale was 0.36), the success rate for item discriminant validity was 95% (GH1 is more closely or equally correlated with the dimensions PF, BP and VT than its own dimension).

Scale level analysis (table 2)

The floor effect is too low for all scales except (RP and RE). On the other hand, a ceiling effect more than 30% for 5 scales (PF, RP, BP, SF and RE) and between 3 and 5% for the others (GH, VT and MH) was observed. Furthermore, mean scores for scales measuring health related disability (PF, RP, BP except RE) were higher than scores for scales measuring well being (GH, VT, and MH except SF). For each scale, the reliability coefficients equaled or exceeded 0.70, ranging from 0.70 for SF scale to 0.90 for PF scale. The internal consistency of each scale exceeded the correlation between that scale and other scales.

Structure validity of the SF-36

Factor analysis of the eight SF-36 scales yielded a two-factor solution corresponding to the hypothesized physical and mental domains of health underlying the SF-36. Table 4 shows the Physical Functioning scale (PF, RP and BP) loading most on the "physical" component and least on the "mental component". Also, the MH scale had the highest loading and the VT, SF had stronger loading on the "mental" component than the "physical" component of health. However, RE correlated with both physical and mental components of health rather than with the mental component alone. The GH scale correlated moderately with both components. 63% of the total variance was accounted for by the first two rotated principal components.

Table 4 Correlations between SF-36 scales and rotated principal components in Lebanon.

Table 5 gives the correlations between SF-36 and socioeconomic variables. For the totality of SF-36 scales, the scores decrease with age, they are less for women than men, increase with education level, and decrease according to family situation (unmarried subjects have higher scores than married subjects, and married subjects have higher scores than divorcees or widow(er)s). On the other hand, no correlation was observed with affiliation to social security, with the exception of the mental scales i.e. VT, SF, RE and MH.

Table 5 Relation between the SF – 36 scale scores and socio-demographic characteristics of the subjects

SF-36 scores were also lower in persons who perceived their financial status as poor; differences were important for all scores of the dimensions. This was the case for satisfaction in work; satisfied subjects perceived better scores than the non-satisfied and inactive subjects. Grave events affected mental dimensions (VT, SF, RE, and MH) as well as the GH. The perception of QoL (Global Index) was statistically significantly related to all scores of dimensions of SF-36. Concerning self-reported morbidity; all eight SF-36 scales scores discriminated between groups differing in physical and mental morbidity (p < 0.01), but not equally well. The comparisons between patients with a specific health problem and patients without that problem (table 6) showed that patients with asthma, visual and hearing disorders, headache, and varicose veins had in many ways poorer QoL (they had poorer scores on 3 or more dimensions of the SF-36). On the other hand, the QoL of patients with hypertension, depression, insomnia, rheumatic and lumbar pains and osteoporosis, were significantly different for all scales of SF-36. Indeed, patients with diabetes and chronic renal failure have the lowest scores, in particular for the PF and GH scales. Finally, epilepsy patients had lower scores of mental health (VT, SF, RE and MH); patients with back hernia had lower scores of physical health (PF, RP, BP, and GH) and MH.

Table 6 Relation between health problems and the mean (SD) SF – 36 scale scores

Quality of life according to habitat

We observed a difference between urban and rural areas (table 1) in relation to education, religious culture and global QoL assessment; and also for morbidity – varicose veins (p = 0.001), depression and anxiety (p = 0.024), nephrolithiasis (p = 0.052), visual disorder (p = 0.015) and nocturia (p = 0.051).

In univariate analysis, with the exception of the VT scale (p = 0.15), the place of residence (urban vs rural) has no influence on SF-36 scales. We also find these results in multivariate analysis (table 7). n the other hand, as regards sociodemographic parameters, age influences only PF, while gender influences PF, RF, BP, GH and VT. Self-reported morbidity significantly influences QoL; for example, depression influences the mental scales (VT, MH and SF) as well as certain physical scales (PF and BP); while rheumatic and lumbar pains, influence the majority of the scales, particularly the physical scales PF, GH and SF. Asthma, even outside attacks, had a negative impact on the RE. Chronic renal failure had an effect on the PF; GH and SF. Disc diseases had a negative effect on the domains of physical functioning, except for RF. Visual disorders are shown to influence MH. This was also shown among those who had experienced a life-changing event during the previous 12 months. Finally, the perception of QoL has significant correlation with the entire domain of SF-36 except PF, RF.

Table 7 Influence of habitat on the SF-36 scale scores: multivariate analysis results.

It should be noted that in univariate analysis, the mode of administration of the questionnaire (self-administration vs. Investigator-administrated) influenced to a small extent PF and RE scales, where the scores of those who answered by self administration are slightly higher than those interviewed by an investigator (p < 0.05). In multivariate analysis, this effect is observed (table 7) for the GH and MH (p < 0.01) and to a lesser extent for VT and SF (p < 0.05).

Discussion

The aim of our study was to adapt the SF-36 questionnaire into Arabic and to evaluate QoL in an urban and rural Lebanese population. With regard to the translation of the questionnaire for our study, some responses related to religious beliefs. Item GH4 of general health was considered to be blasphemous. It should be noted that this attribute was observed in the translation process of the NHP (Nottingham Health Profile) for use in Arabic-speaking countries [53]. According to Bucholz et al. [54], when confronted with a serious disease, patients find that the spiritual or transcendental aspect of life becomes a more important determinant of their QoL. In fact, we found that the items that created problems in cultural adaptation were also found to be confusing by the respondents, which lead us to change the Arabic term "cut down" of items RP1 and RE1 to a more clear and less literary term for the same word and also the term "interfere" of items SF1 and BP2 and the term "to get worse" of the GH4.

Concerning acceptability, it was in general very good, no disturbing questions, few confusing items, very low percentage of missing data for items and scales, and the duration of administration of the questionnaire is short [14, 15]. This reinforces the expected validity (face validity) and therefore makes it possible to confirm the absence of problems related to translation [47].

Concerning the results of the item and scales tests, our results are comparable to those using the American version [15], and to other adaptations performed on French general population [48] and in the English and Chinese population in Singapore [55]. We observe that only PF and BP scales have values of Cronbach's alpha more than 0.90 (see table 3) and this may be used at the subject level [15][47, 51].

Factorial analysis of the scales yielded results identical to the original version with the exception of the RE scale. The RE appears to measure both physical and mental health (moderate association). This discordance is probably explained by the nature of the population and not by a structural defect since the criteria of validity of items and scales are satisfactory [49]. These two dimensions (summary scales) physical and mental explain 63% of the total variability; and even though it is less than that obtained in the U.S. (68%), it is nevertheless acceptable (> 60%) [50]. However, factor analysis results can be influenced by many conditions other than the relationship between underlying concepts, including the skewness of scores and sample size [51].

The presence of a relation between the dimensions of SF-36 and the sociodemographic and clinical parameter is an important finding as such instruments could be used in therapeutic evaluations [23]. Results indicate that many dimensions of SF-36 depend on age, gender, education, family situation, perception of financial status, satisfaction with work, perception of the QoL and morbidity.

We analyzed which factors have the greatest effect on the scale scores of the SF-36. Multiple regression analysis confirmed that habitat is an independent factor for determining the scores of VT. Patients resident in rural areas had higher VT scores than those in urban areas. The non-difference observed between the different scales scores of the SF-36 may be explained by the rapid evolution of communication means and services in Lebanon [56], internal and external displacements of Lebanese population and especially the definition of rurality. We also found that older people report more satisfaction with some domains of life than younger people, except for the PF. However, limitations in physical functioning not only adversely affect the QoL and independence of older persons, but also increase the risk of morbidity and mortality [38]. The QoL of Lebanese women, independent of their age, is poorer than that of men; this has been demonstrated for other indicators such as morbidity (unpublished data). Some elements may explain this difference: sexual taboos, traditional role of the woman as guardian in charge of the health of their children, and even their husbands and the elderly, often to the detriment of the woman's own health [57, 58]. A more sensitive perception of serious events also adds to this phenomenon. Eronen and al. [26], in a cohort of aging Eastern Finnish women, found that some QoL dimensions may improve during aging in postmenopausal women as they age from their fifties into their sixties.

The scores of QoL are lower than American scores, except for the physical scale (PF) [15], which could be due to outcomes such as falls, institutionalization, and death [38, 39]. In addition, certain symptoms (e.g. lumbar and rhumatological pains), comorbidity (discopathy and visual disorders) as well as neurotic disorders found in this population independently influence the different scales of SF-36, which is in concordance with the results reported by Ware and al. [15, 16]. Cohen and al. [59] report that depressed patients and patients experiencing high levels of distress report poor sleep quality and decreased QoL. In fact, in our study, multiple regression (GLM) analysis showed that SF-36 domains scores are not affected by diabetes and hypertension, which could be explained by psychological adaptation to chronic disease [2]. The relation between PF, GH and SF of SF-36 and chronic renal failure has been well demonstrated. [13, 15, 20, 60–62]. But this could not be elicited in our study in view of the small number of patients. Finally, it may also be possible that patients at home differ from hospitalized patients with the same illness, since hospitalization may affect certain domains of QoL in a patient with chronic disease [23]. Mode of administration of the questionnaire by an investigator negatively influences certain dimensions of SF-36 via the age factor, as the majority of illiterate persons are more elderly [40]. This study has certain limitations: it is limited to South Lebanon, because of a lack of resources and time. Certain villages are excluded in view of the security situation. To continue our validation, because this instrument will be utilizable for clinical trials, it is necessary to include an assessment of its responsiveness to change of the group over time [23, 27]. The method of test-retest to appreciate the reproducibility of scores along time [15, 51] has not been studied. Finally, the absence of a valid reference instrument in Arabic remains a major obstacle for the establishment of concurrent validity as well as predictive validity. Self-reporting of diseases as a measurement of health status also presents several limitations: patients' reports of conditions do not exactly reflect physicians' diagnosis; diseases that have similar symptoms may be misdiagnosed. Some people may also be unable to remember all their diseases [57]. The validity is not limited to this study; wider use and repetition in various situations will establish its validity.

Conclusions

In conclusion, it can be said that the main assumptions underlying the SF-36 score Arabic version are preserved when compared with the original American form [15] and that it should therefore be possible to use the instrument to measure Health-Related Quality of Life in Lebanon. The use of such an instrument of QoL would be possible and may change the perspective of health care professionals and health decision makers. However, as regards the impact of the area of residency (urban vs. rural) on QoL, further studies must be carried out in other Lebanese regions using an alternative definition of rurality.

Abbreviations

IQOLA:

international quality of life assessment

QoL:

quality of life

SF:

36-short form 36 health survey

PF:

physical functioning

RP:

Role-Physical

BP:

Bodily Pain

GH:

General Health

VT:

Vitality

SF:

Social Functioning

RE:

Role-Emotional

MH:

Mental Health

HT:

Reported Health Transition

SD:

standard deviation

LCI-M:

living conditions index.modified

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Acknowledgements

We are grateful to the subjects who participated in this survey, to Fiona Caulfield for her help with translation and advice on the manuscript, L. Tayara for useful comments, F. Badran, R. Fatayergi, G. Madhoun, A. Houri, R. Khatib, M. A. Sabbah for their help with the translation of the SF-36. I would also like to thank M. Puyraveau and M. Baud and the interviewers who helped to carry out this study.

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Correspondence to Mariette Mercier.

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IS participated in the design of the study, carried out data collection, performed the statistical analysis and drafted the manuscript

ND participated in analysis of data

SS participated in data collection

NRR participated in analysis of data

MM conceived the study and participated in its design, statistical analysis and coordination

All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Sabbah, I., Drouby, N., Sabbah, S. et al. Quality of Life in rural and urban populations in Lebanon using SF-36 Health Survey. Health Qual Life Outcomes 1, 30 (2003). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1477-7525-1-30

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