ICF linking of patient-reported therapy goals for children with acquired upper extremity impairment

•For children (age 6-18) the greatest proportion of their treatment priorities align with specific aspects of hand and arm use (ICF chapter d445).•Participation in sports and fitness, performing arts, and play are of greater priority that participation in self-care for the population.•The body funct...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hand therapy 2023-01, Vol.36 (1), p.74-84
Hauptverfasser: Dorich, Jenny M., Cornwall, Roger, Uhl, Tim
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container_title Journal of hand therapy
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creator Dorich, Jenny M.
Cornwall, Roger
Uhl, Tim
description •For children (age 6-18) the greatest proportion of their treatment priorities align with specific aspects of hand and arm use (ICF chapter d445).•Participation in sports and fitness, performing arts, and play are of greater priority that participation in self-care for the population.•The body functions priorities for the population include: pain, joint mobility and strength. Patient reported outcome measures are used to evaluate hand therapy outcomes. Yet, limited evidence is available regarding the outcomes children desire from hand therapy. To determine the desired treatment outcomes of children with acquired upper extremity impairments. Descriptive case series Two raters independently applied International Classification of Function, Disability and Health (ICF) linking rules to the Canadian Occupational Performance goals of 151 children, age 6-18, receiving occupational therapy for acquired upper extremity impairments. Prevalence of the linked ICF codes was examined using frequency distributions. Kappa and the proportion of positive agreement assessed inter-rater agreement of the linked codes. Following consensus, two independent raters linked 894 meaningful concepts to the study population's 501 goals derived from the Canadian Occupational Performance. Ninety-two unique ICF codes were linked to these 894 meaningful concepts. Twenty-three ICF codes account for 77.2% of the most frequently linked codes. For these top 23 codes, the greatest proportion (51.4%) of ICF codes are in the d4 mobility chapter representing specific constructs of hand and arm use. The second largest proportion (14.2%) of linked codes are in the d9 Community, society and civic life chapter aligning with participation in sports, music, performing arts and play. Within the d5 self-care chapter, the study population's top priorities included hair care, fitness and drinking. The primary concerns within the b body functions domain are reduced pain, improved joint mobility and strength. The study population's top priorities align with specific dimensions of hand and arm use and participation in sports and fitness, performing arts, and play. Further research may elucidate alignment of these patient-desired outcomes and the item banks of commonly used patient reported outcome measurement scales in this population.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jht.2021.05.001
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Patient reported outcome measures are used to evaluate hand therapy outcomes. Yet, limited evidence is available regarding the outcomes children desire from hand therapy. To determine the desired treatment outcomes of children with acquired upper extremity impairments. Descriptive case series Two raters independently applied International Classification of Function, Disability and Health (ICF) linking rules to the Canadian Occupational Performance goals of 151 children, age 6-18, receiving occupational therapy for acquired upper extremity impairments. Prevalence of the linked ICF codes was examined using frequency distributions. Kappa and the proportion of positive agreement assessed inter-rater agreement of the linked codes. Following consensus, two independent raters linked 894 meaningful concepts to the study population's 501 goals derived from the Canadian Occupational Performance. Ninety-two unique ICF codes were linked to these 894 meaningful concepts. 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subjects Activities of Daily Living
Adolescent
Adults
Arm
Canada
Canadian occupational performance measure
Child
Children
Clinical outcomes
Disability Evaluation
Fitness
Goals
Hand
Humans
International classification of function disability, and health (ICF)
International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health
Mobility
Occupational therapy
Outcomes
Participation
Patient Reported Outcome Measures
Patients
Pediatrics
Physical fitness
Population studies
Priorities
Taxonomy
Teenagers
Therapists
Therapy
Upper Extremity
title ICF linking of patient-reported therapy goals for children with acquired upper extremity impairment
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