Volume 89, Issue 2 , Pages 284-290, February 2008
ABILOCO: A Rasch-Built 13-Item Questionnaire to Assess Locomotion Ability in Stroke Patients
Abstract
Caty GD, Arnould C, Stoquart GG, Thonnard J-L, Lejeune TM. ABILOCO: a Rasch-built 13-item questionnaire to assess locomotion ability in stroke patients.
Objective
To develop a questionnaire (ABILOCO), based on the Rasch measurement model, that can assess locomotion ability in adult stroke patients (International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health activity domain).
Design
Prospective study and questionnaire development.
Setting
A faculty hospital.
Participants
Adult stroke patients (N=100) (age, 64±15y). The time since stroke ranged from 1 to 260 weeks.
Intervention
A preliminary questionnaire included 43 items representing a large sample of locomotion activities. This questionnaire was tested on the 100 stroke patients, and their responses were analyzed using the Rasch model (RUMM 2020 software) to select items that had an ordered rating scale and fitted a unidimensional model.
Main Outcome Measure
The ABILOCO questionnaire.
Results
The retained items resulted in a 13-item questionnaire, which includes a wide range of locomotion abilities well targeted to the sample population, leading to good reliability (R=.93). The item calibration was independent of age, sex, time since stroke, and affected side. The concurrent validity of ABILOCO was also investigated by comparing it with well-known, criterion standard scales (Functional Walking Category, Functional Ambulation Categories, item 12 of the FIM instrument evaluating walking ability) and the walking speed measured with the 10-meter walk test.
Conclusions
The ABILOCO questionnaire presents good psychometric qualities to measure locomotion ability in adult stroke patients. Its range and measurement precision make it attractive for clinical use throughout the rehabilitation process and for clinical research.
Key Words: Locomotion, Questionnaires, Rehabilitation, Stroke
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 authors or upon any organization with which the authors are associated.
PII: S0003-9993(07)01696-6
doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2007.08.155
© 2008 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 89, Issue 2 , Pages 284-290, February 2008
