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Review of prevalence data in, and evaluation of methods for cross cultural adaptation of, UK surveys on tobacco and alcohol in ethnic minority groups

BMJ 2004; 328 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.328.7431.76 (Published 09 January 2004) Cite this as: BMJ 2004;328:76
  1. Raj Bhopal, professor of public health (Raj.Bhopal{at}ed.ac.uk)1,
  2. Amanda Vettini, research associate1,
  3. Sonja Hunt, honorary research fellow1,
  4. Sushmita Wiebe, research fellow1,
  5. Lisa Hanna, PhD student1,
  6. Amanda Amos, senior lecturer1
  1. 1Public Health Sciences Section, Division of Community Health Sciences, Medical School, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9AG
  1. Correspondence to: R Bhopal
  • Accepted 16 October 2003

Abstract

Objective To assess the adequacy of cross cultural adaptations of survey questions on self reported tobacco and alcohol consumption in the United Kingdom.

Design Assessment of consistency of data between studies identified through literature review. Studies evaluated with 12 guidelines developed from the research literature on achieving cross cultural comparability.

Results The literature review identified 18 key studies, five of them on national samples. Survey instruments were obtained for 15 of these. The comparison of prevalence data in national surveys showed some important discrepancies, greater for tobacco than for alcohol. For example, prevalence of cigarette smoking in Bangladeshi women was 6% in a national survey in 1994 and 1% in a national survey in 1999; in Chinese men it was 31% in a survey in 1993-4 and 17% in one in 1999; in African-Caribbean men it was 29% in a 1992 survey and 42% in one in 1993-4. The most guidelines met by any study was three, although one study partly met a fourth. Two studies met no guidelines. Only four studies consulted with ethnic minority communities in developing the questionnaire, none checked each language version with all others, and two stated the questionnaire had not been validated.

Conclusions Surveys have not followed best practice in relation to measurement of risk factors in cross cultural settings. There is inconsistency in the prevalence data on smoking provided by different major national UK studies. Users of such data should be aware of their limitations. Research is needed to help achieve linguistic equivalence of survey questions in cross cultural research.

Footnotes

  • Contributors RB planned the study with input from all other authors and wrote the paper. AV undertook the literature reviews and fieldwork and drafted the project report. SH, SW, LH, and AA helped RB to supervise the project. All authors provided critical comment on the drafts of the paper. RB, AV, and SH are guarantors.

  • Funding Scottish Cancer Group of the Scottish Executive.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Not required.

  • Accepted 16 October 2003
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