figshare
Browse
- No file added yet -

The psychometric properties of the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire in seven musculoskeletal conditions

Download (57.53 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-08, 07:48 authored by Alison Hammond, Yeliz Prior, Mike Colin Horton, Alan Tennant, Sarah Tyson

Purpose: The purpose of this study is to psychometrically test the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire in seven musculoskeletal conditions.

Materials and methods: One thousand and two hundred people with ankylosing spondylitis; osteoarthritis; systemic lupus erythematosus; systemic sclerosis; chronic pain; chronic upper limb disorders; or Primary Sjögren’s syndrome completed the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire, Health Assessment Questionnaire and Short-Form Health Survey v2. We examined internal construct validity using Rasch analysis, internal consistency, concurrent validity with the Health Assessment Questionnaire and Short-Form Health Survey v2. Participants repeated the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire to assess test–retest reliability.

Results: The 12 domains satisfied Rasch model expectations for fit, local dependency, unidimensionality and invariance by age and gender, in each musculoskeletal condition. Internal consistency was consistent with individual use (Cronbach’s α > 0.90); concurrent validity was strong (Health Assessment Questionnaire: rs = 0.60–0.92; Short-Form Health Survey v2 Physical Function: rs = −0.61 to −0.91) and test–retest reliability excellent (Intra-Class Correlation Coefficient(2,1) = 0.77–0.96).

Conclusion: The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire satisfied Rasch model requirements for construct validity and has good reliability and validity in each MSC. The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire can be used as a measure of everyday activity in practice and research with people with musculoskeletal conditions.Implications for rehabilitation

The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire evaluates users’ ability to perform common daily activities (in 12 domains) that were identified as problematic by people with seven musculoskeletal conditions (i.e., osteoarthritis, systemic lupus, ankylosing spondylitis, chronic pain, chronic upper limb conditions, systemic sclerosis, Sjogren’s syndrome).

Most patients considered the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire was the right length and would be helpful for discussing everyday problems with an occupational therapist.

The 12 domains have good reliability and validity and can be combined into two components: Self-Care and Mobility.

The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire is suitable for use both in clinical practice and research and a User Manual is available for therapists and researchers.

The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire evaluates users’ ability to perform common daily activities (in 12 domains) that were identified as problematic by people with seven musculoskeletal conditions (i.e., osteoarthritis, systemic lupus, ankylosing spondylitis, chronic pain, chronic upper limb conditions, systemic sclerosis, Sjogren’s syndrome).

Most patients considered the Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire was the right length and would be helpful for discussing everyday problems with an occupational therapist.

The 12 domains have good reliability and validity and can be combined into two components: Self-Care and Mobility.

The Evaluation of Daily Activity Questionnaire is suitable for use both in clinical practice and research and a User Manual is available for therapists and researchers.

Funding

This study was funded by the United Kingdom Occupational Therapy Research Foundation.

History