Spinal Cord Independence Measure, version III: applicability to the UK spinal cord injured population.

Authors

  • Clive A. Glass
  • Luigi Tesio
  • Malka Itzkovich
  • Bakul M. Soni
  • Pedro Silva
  • Munawar Mecci
  • Raymond Chadwick
  • Waghi el Masry
  • Aheed Osman
  • Gordana Savic
  • Brian Gardner
  • Ebba Bergström
  • Amiram Catz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0398

Keywords:

spinal cord injuries, statistics, rehabilitation.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the validity, reliability and usefulness of the Spinal Cord Independence Measure for the UK spinal cord injury population. DESIGN: Multi-centre cohort study. SETTING: Four UK regional spinal cord injury centres. SUBJECTS: Eighty-six people with spinal cord injury. INTERVENTIONS: Spinal Cord Independence Measure and Functional Independence Measure on admission analysed using inferential statistics, and Rasch analysis of Spinal Cord Independence Measure. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Internal consistency, inter-rater reliability, discriminant validity; Spinal Cord Independence Measure subscale match between distribution of item difficulty and patient ability measurements; reliability of patient ability measures; fit of data to Rasch model; unidimensionality of subscales; hierarchical ordering of categories within items; differential item functioning across patient groups. RESULTS: Scale reliability (kappa coefficients range 0.491-0.835; (p < 0.001)), internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha 0.770 and 0.780 for raters), and validity (Pearson correlation; p < 0.01) were all significant. Spinal Cord Independence Measure subscales compatible with stringent Rasch requirements; mean infit indices high; distinct strata of abilities identified; most thresholds ordered; item hierarchy stable across clinical groups and centres. Misfit and differences in item hierarchy identified. Difficulties assessing central cord injuries highlighted. CONCLUSION: Conventional statistical and Rasch analyses justify the use of the Spinal Cord Independence Measure in clinical practice and research in the UK. Cross-cultural validity may be further improved.

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Published

2009-07-29

How to Cite

Glass, C. A., Tesio, L., Itzkovich, M., Soni, B. M., Silva, P., Mecci, M., … Catz, A. (2009). Spinal Cord Independence Measure, version III: applicability to the UK spinal cord injured population. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 41(9), 723–728. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0398

Issue

Section

Original Report