| Literature DB >> 24757566 |
Sharon L Gorman1, Monica Rivera1, Lise McCarthy2.
Abstract
The function in sitting test (FIST) is a newly developed, performance-based measure examining deficits in seated postural control. The FIST has been shown to be internally consistent and valid in persons with neurological dysfunction but intra- and interrater reliability and test-retest reliability have not been previously described. Seven patients with chronic neurologic dysfunction were tested and videotaped performing the FIST on two consecutive days. Seventeen acute care and inpatient rehabilitation physical therapist raters scored six of the videotaped performance of the FIST on two occasions at least 2 weeks apart. Intraclass correlation coefficients were used to calculate the test-retest and intra- and interrater reliability of the FIST. ICC of 0.97 (95% CI 0.847-0.995) indicated excellent test-retest reliability of the FIST. Intra- and interrater reliability was also excellent with ICCs of 0.99 (95% CI 0.994-0.997) and 0.99 (95% CI 0.988-0.994), respectively. Physical therapists and other rehabilitation professionals can confidently use the FIST in a variety of clinical practice and research settings due to its favorable reliability characteristics. More studies are needed to describe the responsiveness and minimal clinically important level of change in FIST scores to further enhance clinical usefulness of this measure.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24757566 PMCID: PMC3976801 DOI: 10.1155/2014/593280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rehabil Res Pract ISSN: 2090-2867
FIST scoring sheet. Complete details about FIST administration and scoring can be found online at http://www.samuelmerritt.edu/fist.
| FIST item | Score |
|---|---|
| Anterior nudge: light pressure to superior sternum, no warning | |
| Posterior nudge: light pressure between scapular spines, no warning | |
| Lateral nudge: to dominant side/strong side, light pressure at acromion, no warning | |
| Static sitting: 30 seconds | |
| Sitting, nod “no”: left and right | |
| Sitting, eyes closed: 30 seconds | |
| Sitting, lift foot: dominant/strong side, lift foot 1 inch twice | |
| Pick up object from behind: object at midline, hands breadth posterior | |
| Forward reach: use dominant/strong arm, must complete full motion | |
| Lateral reach: use dominant/strong arm, lift opposite ischial tuberosity | |
| Pick object up from floor: from between feet | |
| Posterior scooting: move backward 2 inches | |
| Anterior scooting: move forward 2 inches | |
| Lateral scooting: move to dominant/strong side 2 inches | |
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| Total | |
FIST scoring: 4 independent: completes the task independently and successfully; 3 verbal cues or increased time: completes the task independently and successfully but may need verbal cues; 2 upper extremity support: unable to complete task without using upper extremities for support or assistance; 1 needs assistance: unable to complete task successfully without physical assistance; 0 complete assistance: requires complete physical assistance to perform task successfully and is unable to complete task successfully with physical assistance, or dependent.
Figure 1Study procedures.
Demographics of therapist rater participants (n = 17).
| Gender | Male 23.5% ( |
| Female 76.5% ( | |
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| Age (mean) | 34.5 years (SD = 10.8, range 24–64 years) |
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| Mean FIST training time | 55 minutes (range 45–60 minutes) |
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| Years as licensed physical therapist (mean) | 6.6 years (SD = 6.0, range 0–20 years) |
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| Practice setting | Acute care hospital 29.4% ( |
| Inpatient rehabilitation 58.8% ( | |
| Outpatient rehabilitation 5.9% ( | |
| Academic institution 5.9% ( | |
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| Facilities | Facility A 29.4% ( |
| Facility B 64.7% ( | |
| Facility C 5.9% ( | |
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| Entry-level physical therapy degree | Bachelors 5.9% ( |
| Masters 23.5% ( | |
| DPT 70.6% ( | |
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| Highest degree earned | Ph.D., E.dD., D.Sc. 11.8% ( |
| DPT 64.7% ( | |
| Advanced masters (in PT) 5.9% ( | |
| Advanced masters (other) 5.9% ( | |
| None beyond entry-level 11.8% ( | |
SD: standard deviation; DPT: doctor of physical therapy.