Improvement of a Questionnaire Measuring Activity Limitations in Rising and Sitting Down in Patients With Lower-Extremity Disorders Living at Home
Roorda LD, Molenaar IW, Lankhorst GJ, Bouter LM, and the Measuring Mobility Study Group. Improvement of a questionnaire measuring activity limitations in rising and sitting down in patients with lower-extremity disorders living at home. To improve a self-administered questionnaire that includes 42 d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2005-11, Vol.86 (11), p.2204-2210 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Roorda LD, Molenaar IW, Lankhorst GJ, Bouter LM, and the Measuring Mobility Study Group. Improvement of a questionnaire measuring activity limitations in rising and sitting down in patients with lower-extremity disorders living at home.
To improve a self-administered questionnaire that includes 42 dichotomous items and measures activity limitations in rising and sitting down (R&S) in patients with lower-extremity disorders who live at home.
Cross-sectional study.
Outpatient clinics of secondary and tertiary care centers.
Patients (N=759; 47% men; mean age ± standard deviation, 60.7±15.2y) living at home, with lower-extremity disorders resulting from stroke, poliomyelitis, osteoarthritis, amputation, and complex regional pain syndrome type I.
Not applicable.
(1) Unidimensionality, indicating that items assess only a single construct; (2) fit with the one-parameter logistic model (OPLM), yielding information about patient and item location parameters; (3) intratest reliability, indicating consistency of patients’ item scores; and (4) content validity, indicating completeness with which the items cover the important aspects of the construct that they are attempting to represent.
Thirty-nine of 42 items: (1) loaded on 1 component (variance explained, 59%; item component loadings, ≥.51), (2) showed good fit with the OPLM (
P=.15), (3) had a good intratest reliability (Cronbach α=.96), and (4) had a good content validity (all important aspects represented).
A unidimensional scale that fits with the OPLM has been developed for measuring activity limitations in R&S in patients with lower-extremity disorders who live at home. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9993 1532-821X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apmr.2005.06.005 |