Title of article :
Proposing Development and Utility of a Mobility Composite Measure in Patients with a Neurologic Disorder
Author/Authors :
Medley, Ann School of Physical Therapy - Texas Woman’s University - Dallas - TX , USA , Swank, Chad School of Physical Therapy - Texas Woman’s University - Dallas - TX , USA , Almutairi, Sattam School of Physical Therapy - Texas Woman’s University - Dallas - TX , USA
Abstract :
Outcome measures typically assess single domains making holistic assessment difficult. Our purpose was to develop
a mobility composite measure (MCM) based on four commonly used outcome measures and compare this composite score to the
individual measures in patients with neurologic disorders. Methods. We retrospectively reviewed 148 medical records for inclusion
of primary neurologic diagnosis and scoring for 5 times sit-to-stand test (5TSST), 10-meter walk test (10MWT), 2-minute walk
test (2MWT), and activities-specific balance confidence (ABC) scale. Results. After establishing that a single concept was being
assessed with interitem correlations, raw scores were converted to percentage of normal and combined into the MCM for analysis
from admission to discharge. Scores on each measure significantly improved after intervention (5TSST, 𝑝<.001; 10MWT, 𝑝<
.001; 2MWT, 𝑝<.001; ABC, 𝑝=.02). Mean MCM (𝑛=93) admission scores were 67.55±31.88% and discharge scores were
74.81±34.39% ( 𝑝=.002). On average, patients improved 7.26% on the MCM exceeding the threshold of expected error (MDC95=
3.59%). Conclusions. MCM detected change in patient outcomes statistically and clinically and appears to capture a holistic picture
of functional status. We recommend a prospective study to further investigate a “composite measure” incorporating measures from
several functional domains.
Keywords :
Proposing Development , Utility of a Mobility Composite Measure , Patients , Neurologic Disorder , MCM
Journal title :
Rehabilitation Research and Practice