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Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Upper limb activity measures for children with cerebral palsy have a number of limitations, for example, lack of validity and poor responsiveness. To overcome these limitations, we developed the Children's Arm Rehabilitation Measure (ChARM), a parent‐reported questionnai...

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Autores principales: Preston, N., Horton, M., Levesley, M., Mon‐Williams, M., O'Connor, R.J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5811897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28112465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pri.1684
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author Preston, N.
Horton, M.
Levesley, M.
Mon‐Williams, M.
O'Connor, R.J.
author_facet Preston, N.
Horton, M.
Levesley, M.
Mon‐Williams, M.
O'Connor, R.J.
author_sort Preston, N.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Upper limb activity measures for children with cerebral palsy have a number of limitations, for example, lack of validity and poor responsiveness. To overcome these limitations, we developed the Children's Arm Rehabilitation Measure (ChARM), a parent‐reported questionnaire validated for children with cerebral palsy aged 5–16 years. This paper describes both the development of the ChARM items and response categories and its psychometric testing and further refinement using the Rasch measurement model. METHODS: To generate valid items for the ChARM, we collected goals of therapy specifically developed by therapists, children with cerebral palsy, and their parents for improving activity limitation of the upper limb. The activities, which were the focus of these goals, formed the basis for the items. Therapists typically break an activity into natural stages for the purpose of improving activity performance, and these natural orders of achievement formed each item's response options. Items underwent face validity testing with health care professionals, parents of children with cerebral palsy, academics, and lay persons. A Rasch analysis was performed on ChARM questionnaires completed by the parents of 170 children with cerebral palsy from 12 hospital paediatric services. The ChARM was amended, and the procedure repeated on 148 ChARMs (from children's mean age: 10 years and 1 month; range: 4 years and 8 months to 16 years and 11 months; 85 males; Manual Ability Classification System Levels I = 9, II = 26, III = 48, IV = 45, and V = 18). RESULTS: The final 19‐item unidimensional questionnaire displayed fit to the Rasch model (chi‐square p = .18), excellent reliability (person separation index = 0.95, α = 0.95), and no floor or ceiling effects. Items showed no response bias for gender, distribution of impairment, age, or learning disability. DISCUSSION: The ChARM is a psychometrically sound measure of upper limb activity validated for children with cerebral palsy aged 5–16 years. The ChARM is freely available for use to clinicians and nonprofit organisations.
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spelling pubmed-58118972018-02-16 Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy Preston, N. Horton, M. Levesley, M. Mon‐Williams, M. O'Connor, R.J. Physiother Res Int Research Articles BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Upper limb activity measures for children with cerebral palsy have a number of limitations, for example, lack of validity and poor responsiveness. To overcome these limitations, we developed the Children's Arm Rehabilitation Measure (ChARM), a parent‐reported questionnaire validated for children with cerebral palsy aged 5–16 years. This paper describes both the development of the ChARM items and response categories and its psychometric testing and further refinement using the Rasch measurement model. METHODS: To generate valid items for the ChARM, we collected goals of therapy specifically developed by therapists, children with cerebral palsy, and their parents for improving activity limitation of the upper limb. The activities, which were the focus of these goals, formed the basis for the items. Therapists typically break an activity into natural stages for the purpose of improving activity performance, and these natural orders of achievement formed each item's response options. Items underwent face validity testing with health care professionals, parents of children with cerebral palsy, academics, and lay persons. A Rasch analysis was performed on ChARM questionnaires completed by the parents of 170 children with cerebral palsy from 12 hospital paediatric services. The ChARM was amended, and the procedure repeated on 148 ChARMs (from children's mean age: 10 years and 1 month; range: 4 years and 8 months to 16 years and 11 months; 85 males; Manual Ability Classification System Levels I = 9, II = 26, III = 48, IV = 45, and V = 18). RESULTS: The final 19‐item unidimensional questionnaire displayed fit to the Rasch model (chi‐square p = .18), excellent reliability (person separation index = 0.95, α = 0.95), and no floor or ceiling effects. Items showed no response bias for gender, distribution of impairment, age, or learning disability. DISCUSSION: The ChARM is a psychometrically sound measure of upper limb activity validated for children with cerebral palsy aged 5–16 years. The ChARM is freely available for use to clinicians and nonprofit organisations. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2017-01-23 2018-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5811897/ /pubmed/28112465 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pri.1684 Text en © 2017 The Authors. Physiotherapy Research International Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Preston, N.
Horton, M.
Levesley, M.
Mon‐Williams, M.
O'Connor, R.J.
Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title_full Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title_fullStr Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title_full_unstemmed Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title_short Development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
title_sort development of a parent‐reported questionnaire evaluating upper limb activity limitation in children with cerebral palsy
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5811897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28112465
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pri.1684
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