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1.
Qual Life Res ; 31(7): 2201-2212, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35258805

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To develop two item content-matched, precise, score-level targeted inpatient physical function (PF) short form (SF) measures: one clinician-reported, one patient-reported. Items were derived from PROMIS PF bank content; scores are reported on the PROMIS PF T-score metric. METHODS: The PROMIS PF item bank was reviewed for content measuring lower-level PF status (T-scores 10-50) with high item set score-level reliability (≥ 0.90). Selected patient-reported (PR) items were also edited to function as clinician-reported (CR) items. Items were reviewed by clinicians and field tested; responses were assessed for meeting PROMIS measure development standards. New CR and PR items were calibrated using patient responses to the original PROMIS PF items as anchoring data. SFs were constructed, based on content and precision. RESULTS: Nine PROMIS PF items were candidates for CR and PR inpatient PF assessment; three new items were written to extend content coverage. An inpatient sample (N = 515; 55.1% female; mean age = 66.2 years) completed 12 PR items and was assessed by physical therapists (using 12 CR items). Analyses indicated item sets met expected measure development standards. Twelve new CR and three new PR items were linked to the PROMIS PF metric (raw score r = 0.73 and 0.90, respectively). A 5-item CR SF measure was constructed; score-level reliabilities were ≥ 0.90 for T-scores 13-45. A 5-item PR SF measure was assembled, mirroring CR SF content. CONCLUSIONS: Two item content-matched SFs have been developed for clinician and patient reporting and are an effective, efficient means of assessing inpatient PF and offer complementary perspectives.


Subject(s)
Inpatients , Quality of Life , Adult , Aged , Data Collection , Female , Humans , Male , Patient Reported Outcome Measures , Quality of Life/psychology , Reference Standards , Reproducibility of Results , Surveys and Questionnaires
2.
J Rehabil Res Dev ; 41(3A): 293-312, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15543447

ABSTRACT

Several converging lines of contemporary evidence suggest that weakness presents a more serious compromise to movement function in poststroke hemiplegia than spasticity. This review examines the clinical and functional phenomena of weakness in poststroke hemiplegia, currently available evidence identifying physiologic substrates contributing to weakness, and reports of early investigations involving high-resistance training targeted at improving strength and the transfer of strength to improvements in functional capacity. Based on this information, we describe some unsolved problems and indicate some likely lines of development to increase our knowledge regarding how resistance training can be included in effective stroke rehabilitation.


Subject(s)
Hemiplegia/etiology , Muscle Weakness/physiopathology , Muscle Weakness/rehabilitation , Stroke/complications , Exercise Movement Techniques , Humans , Motor Neurons/physiology , Muscle Weakness/etiology , Recovery of Function/physiology , Recruitment, Neurophysiological/physiology
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