Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Volume 83, Issue 1 , Pages 10-18, January 2002

The Wheelchair Skills Test: A pilot study of a new outcome measure☆☆★★

Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Department of Medicine (Kirby, Swuste), and Department of Engineering Mathematics (Dupuis), Dalhousie University; and the Clinical Locomotor Function Laboratory (MacLeod), and Department of Occupational Therapy (Monroe), Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, Halifax, NS, Canada

Received in revised form 3 January 2001; accepted 3 January 2001.

Abstract 

Kirby RL, Swuste J, Dupuis DJ, MacLeod DA, Monroe R. The Wheelchair Skills Test: a pilot study of a new outcome measure. Arch Phys Med Rehabil 2002;83:10-8. Objective: To evaluate the practicality, safety, reliability, validity, and usefulness of a new Wheelchair Skills Test (WST). Design: A pilot study with within-subject comparisons. Setting: Rehabilitation center. Patients: Twenty-four wheelchair users (11 with amputations, 4 with stroke, 3 with musculoskeletal disorders, 3 with spinal cord injury, 3 with neuromuscular disorders). Intervention: The WST. Main Outcome Measures: Subjects were videotaped while performing 33 skills twice (>10d apart). Their ability to perform each skill was rated on a 3-point ordinal scale. The test-retest, intra-, and interrater reliabilities were determined. Each subject's occupational therapist completed a visual analog scale (VAS), reflecting a global rating of the subject's manual wheelchair skills. We assessed validity by evaluating whether the WST detected expected changes (construct validity) and how well the total WST scores correlated with the occupational therapists' global ratings (concurrent validity). Each occupational therapist also used a VAS to quantify the usefulness of the WST. Results: The mean time required to administer the WST was 29 minutes. There were no adverse incidents. For the test-retest, intra-, and interrater reliabilities, the correlations for the total scores were .65 (P = .001), .96 (P < .001), and .95 (P < .001), respectively. The 9 therapists unanimously endorsed 30 (91%) of the 33 WST skills. The correlation between the mean changes in the WST and global rating scores was .45 (P < .05). There was a slight negative relationship between total WST score and age (P < .05). There were no significant differences related to the diagnoses accounting for wheelchair use. Wheelchair users with more than 3 weeks of experience with their wheelchairs scored higher than those with less experience (P = .0085). The correlations between the WST and global rating scores ranged from .40 to .54 (P < .05). Through Rasch analysis, we eliminated 6 skills, with the remaining skills comprising a unidimensional screening test of wheelchair ability. The mean VAS score for perceived usefulness was 59%. Conclusions: The WST is practical, safe, well tolerated, exhibits good to excellent reliability, excellent content validity, fair construct and concurrent validity, and moderate usefulness. This pilot study makes an important contribution toward meeting the need for a well-validated outcome measure of manual wheelchair ability. © 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Keywords:  Motor skills, Occupational therapy, Rehabilitation, Reproducibility of results, Wheelchairs

 

 Supported in part by the Canadian Institutes for Health Research and the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre Research Fund.

☆☆ No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit upon the author(s) or upon any organization with which the author(s) is/are associated.

 Reprint requests to R. Lee Kirby, MD, Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, Rehabilitation Centre, 1341 Summer St, Halifax, NS B3H 4K4, Canada, e-mail: kirby@is.dal.ca.

★★ Supplier

 a. Clinical Locomotor Function Laboratory, Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, Rehabilitation Centre Site, 1341 Summer St, Halifax, NS B3H 4K4, Canada.

PII: S0003-9993(02)89995-6

doi:10.1053/apmr.2002.26823

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
Volume 83, Issue 1 , Pages 10-18, January 2002