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Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)

A standardized set of measures to assess functioning after trauma in humanitarian settings has been called for. The Activity Independence Measure for Trauma (AIM-T) is a clinician-rated measure of independence in 20 daily activities among patients after trauma. Designed in Afghanistan, it has since...

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Autores principales: Gohy, Bérangère, Opava, Christina H., von Schreeb, Johan, Van den Bergh, Rafael, Brus, Aude, El Hamid Qaradaya, Abed, Mafuko, Jean-Marie, Al-Abbasi, Omar, Cherestal, Sophia, Fernandes, Livia, Da Silva Frois, Andre, Weerts, Eric, Brodin, Nina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001334
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author Gohy, Bérangère
Opava, Christina H.
von Schreeb, Johan
Van den Bergh, Rafael
Brus, Aude
El Hamid Qaradaya, Abed
Mafuko, Jean-Marie
Al-Abbasi, Omar
Cherestal, Sophia
Fernandes, Livia
Da Silva Frois, Andre
Weerts, Eric
Brodin, Nina
author_facet Gohy, Bérangère
Opava, Christina H.
von Schreeb, Johan
Van den Bergh, Rafael
Brus, Aude
El Hamid Qaradaya, Abed
Mafuko, Jean-Marie
Al-Abbasi, Omar
Cherestal, Sophia
Fernandes, Livia
Da Silva Frois, Andre
Weerts, Eric
Brodin, Nina
author_sort Gohy, Bérangère
collection PubMed
description A standardized set of measures to assess functioning after trauma in humanitarian settings has been called for. The Activity Independence Measure for Trauma (AIM-T) is a clinician-rated measure of independence in 20 daily activities among patients after trauma. Designed in Afghanistan, it has since been used in other contexts. Before recommending the AIM-T for wider use, its measurement properties required confirmation. This study aims at item reduction followed by content validity assessment of the AIM-T. Using a two-step revision process, first, routinely collected data from 635 patients at five facilities managing patients after trauma in Haiti, Burundi, Yemen, and Iraq were used for item reduction. This was performed by analyzing inter-item redundancy and distribution of the first version of the AIM-T (AIM-T(1)) item scores, resulting in a shortened version (AIM-T(2)). Second, content validity of the AIM-T(2) was assessed by item content validity indices (I-CVI, 0–1) based on structured interviews with 23 health care professionals and 60 patients in Haiti, Burundi, and Iraq. Through the analyses, nine pairs of redundant items (r≥0.90) were identified in the AIM-T(1), leading to the removal of nine items, and resulting in AIM-T(2). All remaining items were judged highly relevant, appropriate, clear, feasible and representative by most of participants (I-CVI>0.5). Ten items with I-CVI 0.5–0.85 were revised to improve their cultural relevance or appropriateness and one item was added, resulting in the AIM-T(3). In conclusion, the proposed 12-item AIM-T(3) is overall relevant, clear, and representative of independence in daily activity after trauma and it includes items appropriate and feasible to be observed by clinicians across different humanitarian settings. While some additional measurement properties remain to be evaluated, the present version already has the potential to serve as a routine measure to assess patients after trauma in humanitarian settings.
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spelling pubmed-100213942023-03-17 Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T) Gohy, Bérangère Opava, Christina H. von Schreeb, Johan Van den Bergh, Rafael Brus, Aude El Hamid Qaradaya, Abed Mafuko, Jean-Marie Al-Abbasi, Omar Cherestal, Sophia Fernandes, Livia Da Silva Frois, Andre Weerts, Eric Brodin, Nina PLOS Glob Public Health Research Article A standardized set of measures to assess functioning after trauma in humanitarian settings has been called for. The Activity Independence Measure for Trauma (AIM-T) is a clinician-rated measure of independence in 20 daily activities among patients after trauma. Designed in Afghanistan, it has since been used in other contexts. Before recommending the AIM-T for wider use, its measurement properties required confirmation. This study aims at item reduction followed by content validity assessment of the AIM-T. Using a two-step revision process, first, routinely collected data from 635 patients at five facilities managing patients after trauma in Haiti, Burundi, Yemen, and Iraq were used for item reduction. This was performed by analyzing inter-item redundancy and distribution of the first version of the AIM-T (AIM-T(1)) item scores, resulting in a shortened version (AIM-T(2)). Second, content validity of the AIM-T(2) was assessed by item content validity indices (I-CVI, 0–1) based on structured interviews with 23 health care professionals and 60 patients in Haiti, Burundi, and Iraq. Through the analyses, nine pairs of redundant items (r≥0.90) were identified in the AIM-T(1), leading to the removal of nine items, and resulting in AIM-T(2). All remaining items were judged highly relevant, appropriate, clear, feasible and representative by most of participants (I-CVI>0.5). Ten items with I-CVI 0.5–0.85 were revised to improve their cultural relevance or appropriateness and one item was added, resulting in the AIM-T(3). In conclusion, the proposed 12-item AIM-T(3) is overall relevant, clear, and representative of independence in daily activity after trauma and it includes items appropriate and feasible to be observed by clinicians across different humanitarian settings. While some additional measurement properties remain to be evaluated, the present version already has the potential to serve as a routine measure to assess patients after trauma in humanitarian settings. Public Library of Science 2022-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC10021394/ /pubmed/36962914 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001334 Text en © 2022 Gohy et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gohy, Bérangère
Opava, Christina H.
von Schreeb, Johan
Van den Bergh, Rafael
Brus, Aude
El Hamid Qaradaya, Abed
Mafuko, Jean-Marie
Al-Abbasi, Omar
Cherestal, Sophia
Fernandes, Livia
Da Silva Frois, Andre
Weerts, Eric
Brodin, Nina
Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title_full Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title_fullStr Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title_short Monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: Item reduction and assessment of content validity of the Activity Independence Measure-Trauma (AIM-T)
title_sort monitoring independence in daily life activities after trauma in humanitarian settings: item reduction and assessment of content validity of the activity independence measure-trauma (aim-t)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10021394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36962914
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001334
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