Comparison of the structural validity of three Balance Evaluation Systems Test in older adults with femoral or vertebral fracture

OBJECTIVETo clarify and compare the structural validity of 3 Balance Evaluation Systems Tests (BESTest, Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractures. DESIGNCross-sectional study. SUBJECTSNinety-four older adults (age ?65 years) with femoral or vertebral fractu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of rehabilitation medicine 2020-07, Vol.52 (7), p.jrm00079-jrm00079
Hauptverfasser: Miyata, K, Hasegawa, S, Iwamoto, H, Otani, T, Kaizu, Y, Shinohara, T, Usuda, S
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVETo clarify and compare the structural validity of 3 Balance Evaluation Systems Tests (BESTest, Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) in older adults with femoral or vertebral fractures. DESIGNCross-sectional study. SUBJECTSNinety-four older adults (age ?65 years) with femoral or vertebral fractures, who could walk without physical assistance. METHODSFour BESTest models (BESTest, one-factor Mini-BESTest, four-factor Mini-BESTest, and Brief-BESTest) were examined using confirmatory factor analysis, and the models goodness-of-fit was assessed. Unidimensionality of the best-fitting model was confirmed by Rasch principal component analysis on the residuals. RESULTSConfirmatory factor analysis showed that the four-factor Mini-BESTest model (comparative fit index?=?0.952; Tucker-Lewis index?=?0.937; root-mean square error of approximation?=?0.060; standardized root-mean-square residual?=?0.062) has a better structure than other models. The principal component analysis of standardized residuals showed that the variance attributable to Rasch factor was good, with eigenvalues
ISSN:1651-2081
1650-1977
1651-2081
DOI:10.2340/16501977-2709