ESemantic equivalence of Pediatric Subjective Global Nutritional Assessment Questionnaire for nutritional screening in pediatric patients with cancer

Authors

  • Danúbia da Cunha Antunes SARAIVA Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  • Wanélia Vieira AFONSO Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  • Nivaldo Barroso de PINHO Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  • Wilza Arantes Ferreira PERES Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
  • Patricia de Carvalho PADILHA Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Keywords:

Nutrition assessment, Cross-cultural comparison, Neoplasms, Pediatrics, Triage

Abstract

Objective
Perform the semantic equivalence of Pediatric Subjective Global Nutritional Assessment and its adaptation to the Portuguese language for use in pediatric patients hospitalized with cancer.

Methods
The semantic equivalence process involved the following steps: translation, synthesis of translations, back-translation, discussion with Expert Committee and pre-test, steps that took place at the Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro and at the Instituto Nacional de Câncer José Alencar Gomes da Silva. The questionnaire was pretested in 32 patients with pediatric cancer, of the aged 2-18 years, to check its suitability in this population.

Results
All steps justified the equivalence semantics of the instrument. Discrete changes were necessary in the Pediatric Subjective Global Nutritional Assessment instrument for the Brazilian context. According to the responses of each free expert for each of the 56 assertions, 81% of the responses were classified as “unchanged”. It was a good semantic equivalence between the translation and the back-translation and the original version.

Conclusion
The Brazilian version of Pediatric Subjective Global Nutritional Assessment was well understood by the study population and was adequate to continue with the remaining steps of cross-cultural adaptation and validation tool for further application in hospitalized pediatric patients with cancer.

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Published

2023-03-23

How to Cite

da Cunha Antunes SARAIVA, D. ., Vieira AFONSO, W. ., Barroso de PINHO, N., Arantes Ferreira PERES, W. ., & de Carvalho PADILHA, P. . (2023). ESemantic equivalence of Pediatric Subjective Global Nutritional Assessment Questionnaire for nutritional screening in pediatric patients with cancer. Brazilian Journal of Nutrition, 29(2). Retrieved from https://periodicos.puc-campinas.edu.br/nutricao/article/view/8009

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL ARTICLE