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Establishing the Reliability and Validity of Measurements of Walking Time Using the Emory Functional Ambulation Profile
Author(s) -
Steven L. Wolf,
Pamela A. Catlin,
Katherine Gage,
Karen Gurucharri,
Renee L. Robertson,
Kathleen Stephen
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
physical therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1538-6724
pISSN - 0031-9023
DOI - 10.1093/ptj/79.12.1122
Subject(s) - berg balance scale , reliability (semiconductor) , gait , physical medicine and rehabilitation , balance (ability) , test (biology) , concurrent validity , inter rater reliability , physical therapy , medicine , psychology , timed up and go test , audiology , psychometrics , internal consistency , developmental psychology , rating scale , paleontology , power (physics) , physics , quantum mechanics , biology
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEThe Emory Functional Ambulation Profile (E-FAP) measures time to walk in different environments and accounts for use of assistive devices. This study assessed the reliability and validity of walking time measurements using these components.SUBJECTSTwenty-eight subjects who had strokes and 28 subjects without impairment were recruited.METHODSThe E-FAP, Berg Balance Test, Functional Reach Test, and Timed 10-Meter Walk Test were administered in random order during a single data collection session.RESULTSInterrater reliability for the total E-FAP was > or = .997. Subjects without impairment performed better on all 4 tests than did subjects who had strokes. Increased times on the E-FAP correlated with poor performance on the Berg Balance Test and slow gait speeds on the Timed 10-Meter Walk Test in the subjects who had strokes. The E-FAP scores and the Functional Reach Test scores were not correlated.CONCLUSION AND DISCUSSIONThe E-FAP can be administered easily and inexpensively. Because the E-FAP scores differentiated subject groups and correlated with known measures of function, the E-FAP may be a clinically useful measure of ambulation.

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