| Literature DB >> 32727385 |
Leon N Geffen1, Gabrielle Kelly2, John N Morris3, Sophie Hogeveen4, John Hirdes5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Low and middle-income countries have growing older populations and could benefit from the use of multi-domain geriatric assessments in overcoming the challenge of providing quality health services to older persons. This paper reports on the outcomes of a study carried out in Cape Town, South Africa on the validity of the interRAI Check-Up Self-Report instrument, a multi-domain assessment instrument designed to screen older persons in primary health settings. This is the first criterion validity study of the instrument. The instrument is designed to identify specific health problems and needs, including psychosocial or cognition problems and issues related to functional decline. The interRAI Check-Up Self-Report is designed to be compatible with the clinician administered instruments in the interRAI suite of assessments, but the validity of the instrument against clinician ratings has not yet been established. We therefore sought to establish whether community health workers, rather than trained healthcare professionals could reliably administer the self-report instrument to older persons.Entities:
Keywords: Comprehensive assessment; Geriatric assessment; South Africa; Validity; interRAI
Year: 2020 PMID: 32727385 PMCID: PMC7391526 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-020-01659-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Sample descriptiona
| 70.1 | |
| Female | 94 (84%) |
| Male | 18 (16%) |
| Black African | 112 (100%) |
| No | 41 (37%) |
| Yes | 71 (63%) |
| Never married | 19 (17%) |
| Married | 27 (24%) |
| Partner | 0 (0%) |
| Widowed | 57 (51%) |
| Separated | 5 (4.5%) |
| Divorced | 4 (3.5%) |
| With spouse/ partner & others | 19 (17%) |
| With child – not spouse/partner | 20 (18%) |
| With siblings | 3 (3%) |
| With other relatives. | 64 (57%) |
| With non-relatives. | 1 (1%) |
| Not answered. | 5 (4%) |
| Excellent | 3 (3%) |
| Good | 29 (26%) |
| Fair | 61 (54%) |
| Poor | 19 (17%) |
aBased on clinician assessment
Average Kappa or Weighted Kappa values for interRAI Self-Reported Check-Up items compared with clinician administered ratings
| Section | Number of Items | Average Kappa Value | Example topics |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Identification Information | 3 | 0.81 | Gender, marital status |
| B. Thinking and communication | 7 | 0.46 | Hearing, vision, cognition |
| C. Well-being | 8 | 0.48 | Mood, social relationships |
| D. Daily Activities | 22 | 0.70 | ADL, IADL |
| E. Health Conditions | 21 | 0.65 | Falls, substance use, physical symptoms |
| F. Disease Diagnoses | 11 | 0.50 | Miscellaneous diagnoses |
| G. Nutrition | 3 | 0.32 | Weight loss, eating patterns |
| H. Procedures/Treatments | 1 | 0.31 | Influenza vaccination |
| I. Finances and stressor | 2 | 0.58 | Economic trade-offs, stressful events |
Fig. 1Kappa (95% CL) values for self-reported vs clinician-rated Check-Up items on the interRAI Check-Up instrument