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  • Crosswalk of participation self-report measures for aphasia to the ICF: what content is being measured?

    Author(s)
    Brandenburg, Caitlin
    Worrall, Linda
    Rodriguez, Amy
    Bagraith, Karl
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Brandenburg, Caitlin
    Year published
    2015
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Purpose: Community participation is of importance to people with aphasia, who are at risk of becoming socially isolated. This study investigates the content of measures of community and social participation for this population by crosswalking items to the ICF. This will evaluate: (1) to what extent the included assessments assessed participation only, (2) what content appeared most frequently and (3) which response formats were utilised. Methods: Instruments were identified from four systematic reviews and a literature search. 111 instruments that were self-reported, developed for adults and published in English were identified. ...
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    Purpose: Community participation is of importance to people with aphasia, who are at risk of becoming socially isolated. This study investigates the content of measures of community and social participation for this population by crosswalking items to the ICF. This will evaluate: (1) to what extent the included assessments assessed participation only, (2) what content appeared most frequently and (3) which response formats were utilised. Methods: Instruments were identified from four systematic reviews and a literature search. 111 instruments that were self-reported, developed for adults and published in English were identified. Items were linked to ICF domains, and third-level categories of the Activities and Participation chapter. Results: Ninety instruments (2426 items) were included. Of these, 29 instruments contained over 50 participation items. The most frequently included participation categories in this subset were education, paid employment, recreation, socialising, being a carer, relating with friends, family and spouses, volunteer work, managing finances, community life, civic duties, human rights and religion/spirituality. Self-care, mobility and domestic life concepts were also frequently reported. Commonly used response formats were restriction, frequency and satisfaction. Conclusions: Few instruments solely assessed participation according to our operationalisation. This study provides a list of possible measures for use in assessing participation.
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    Journal Title
    Disability and Rehabilitation
    Volume
    37
    Issue
    13
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.3109/09638288.2014.955132
    Subject
    Science & Technology
    Life Sciences & Biomedicine
    Rehabilitation
    Aphasia
    community
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/412221
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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