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Reliability and Validity of the Gillette Functional Assessment Questionnaire as an Outcome Measure in Children with Walking Disabilities

340

Citations

7

References

2000

Year

TLDR

The Gillette Functional Assessment Questionnaire includes a 10‑level parent‑report walking scale that spans from non‑ambulatory to ambulatory abilities across all community settings and terrains. The scale’s reliability and validity were evaluated in 41 neuromuscular patients (ambulation levels 6–10) seen in GCSH’s Motion Analysis Laboratory between May 1996 and January 1997. The walking scale demonstrated strong parent‑report test–retest and inter‑rater reliability, high content and concurrent validity with standardized functional measures, energy expenditure, and gait analysis, and can aid clinicians in tracking functional change in children with chronic neuromuscular conditions.

Abstract

Summary A 10-level, parent-report walking scale encompassing a range of walking abilities from nonambulatory to ambulatory in all community settings and terrains was developed at Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare (GCSH) as part of the Gillette Functional Assessment Questionnaire (FAQ). The reliability and validity of the walking-scale portion of the FAQ were tested on a group of individuals seen in the Motion Analysis Laboratory at GCSH between May 1996 and January 1997. A complete data set on 41 individuals with neuromuscular conditions represented the community ambulation levels (6–10) of the walking scale. Good test–retest reliability among parents and good interrater reliability between parents and community caregivers was demonstrated. Content and concurrent validity were also high, as assessed by correlation to standardized functional outcome measures, energy expenditure, and gait-analysis information. A reliable and valid scale specific to the task of walking such as the FAQ can assist clinicians in documenting functional change in children with chronic neuromuscular conditions.

References

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