OBJECTIVE: To assess the inter-rater reliability and concurrent validity of walking speed measurement after traumatic brain injury. DESIGN: Twelve subjects each completed five comfortably paced and five fast-paced walking trials. Walking speed was measured simultaneously by five observers using a stopwatch (clinical procedure) and by infrared timing gates (gold standard). SETTING: Brain injury rehabilitation unit. SUBJECTS: People with traumatic brain injury who could walk independently and were participating in a rehabilitation programme. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Walking speed over a 10-metre distance. RESULTS: The inter-rater reliability of walking speed measured using a stopwatch was very high, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of at least 0.998 for both comfortable and fast-paced tests. Concurrent validity was excellent for comfortable and fast tests, with perfect correlations between the stopwatch and infrared timing gate measurement procedures. CONCLUSIONS: Physiotherapists can use a stopwatch as a reliable and valid measurement tool to quantify walking speed over a short distance at both comfortable and fast paces in people who have sustained traumatic brain injuries.
OBJECTIVE: To assess the inter-rater reliability and concurrent validity of walking speed measurement after traumatic brain injury. DESIGN: Twelve subjects each completed five comfortably paced and five fast-paced walking trials. Walking speed was measured simultaneously by five observers using a stopwatch (clinical procedure) and by infrared timing gates (gold standard). SETTING:Brain injury rehabilitation unit. SUBJECTS:People with traumatic brain injury who could walk independently and were participating in a rehabilitation programme. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Walking speed over a 10-metre distance. RESULTS: The inter-rater reliability of walking speed measured using a stopwatch was very high, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of at least 0.998 for both comfortable and fast-paced tests. Concurrent validity was excellent for comfortable and fast tests, with perfect correlations between the stopwatch and infrared timing gate measurement procedures. CONCLUSIONS: Physiotherapists can use a stopwatch as a reliable and valid measurement tool to quantify walking speed over a short distance at both comfortable and fast paces in people who have sustained traumatic brain injuries.
Authors: Masoome Ebrahimzadeh; Noureddin Nakhostin Ansari; Scott Hasson; Ardalan Shariat; Seyed Ahmad Afzali Journal: Ann Med Surg (Lond) Date: 2021-12-02