| Literature DB >> 27372400 |
Patrick McLaughlin1, Brett Vaughan2, James Shanahan3, Jake Martin3, Gabriel Linger3.
Abstract
The Foot Posture Index (FPI-6) is a reliable (experienced examiners) assessment tool used in clinical practice to classify foot posture. No work has been completed to determine the reliability of the FPI-6 between novice examiners. Therefore, the aim was to determine the inter-examiner reliability of the FPI-6 using two novice examiners (graduate level osteopathy students). The FPI-6 was used to classify the feet of 83 students recruited as part of a larger study. Data were collected simultaneously by both examiners, but there was no communication between them. The scoring system provided by the FPI-6 manual was used to assess all feet. Collated data were assessed between examiners for reliability based on raw, transformed and foot type scores. The inter-examiner reliability was high for both left (intra-class correlation coefficient ICC2,1 = 0.86) and right (ICC2,1 = 0.85) feet for the novice examiners. When data were assessed based on foot type classification the examiners agreed on 76% of the left feet and 82% of the right feet with Kappa values of 0.73 and 0.72 respectively. The FPI-6 is a robust clinical tool that can be reliably utilised by inexperienced clinicians. CrownKeywords: Evaluation; FPI-6; Novice; Reliability
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27372400 DOI: 10.1016/j.math.2016.06.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Man Ther ISSN: 1356-689X