ABILHAND-Kids scores can be reliably used as a performance- and capacity-based rating method across different raters. Parents' performance-based ratings are less reliable than their capacity-based ratings. Resulting repeatability coefficients can be used to interpret ABILHAND-Kids ratings with more confidence. Implications for Rehabilitation The ABILHAND-Kids is a valuable tool to assess a child's unimanual and bimanual upper limb activities. The reliability of the ABILHANDS-Kids is good across different observers as a performance- and capacity-based rating method. Parents' performance-based ratings are less reliable than their capacity-based ones. This study has generated repeatability coefficients for clinical decision making.
Study design: Development of Tetraplegia Hand Activity Questionnaire (THAQ). Setting: Patients and spinal cord injury (SCI) professionals from five rehabilitation centres in the Netherlands and Belgium. Objective: To construct a disease-specific questionnaire to evaluate interventions to the armhand of tetraplegics in terms of gained and lost activities relevant to the patient. Methods: All arm-hand function-related activities were inventoried by examining existing scales and interviewing spinal cord injury patients and professionals in the field. Subsequently, item reduction was achieved; first, in the technical construction by incorporating all activities in an item list, then reducing the list by selecting the items most likely to be sensitive to change after surgical or functional electro stimulation interventions on the arm-hand as judged by an expert panel, using a Delphi method. Results: The arm-hand-related activity inventory comprised 652 activities. The technical construction of the items and the Delphi procedure resulted in a questionnaire with 153 items. The experts considered many of the 'new' activities more relevant for the evaluation of hand function interventions than those found in scales studied in the literature. This is reflected in a relatively large proportion of new activities (69%) for the item list of the THAQ, and even more in the domains work/admin/telecom (88%) and leisure (100%).
Conclusion:The questionnaire constructed to assess hand function-related activities contains relevant activities to evaluate arm-hand function-related interventions for tetraplegic SCI patients.
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