(Stroke. 1999;30:2131-2140.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Center on Aging (P.W.D., D.W., S.M.L.), and the Department of Preventative Medicine (D.W., S.M.L.), University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan; the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Kansas City, Mo (P.W.D., L.J.L.); the Department of Health Policy and Management (P.W.D.) University of Kansas, Overland Park, Kan; the Department of Psychology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan (S.E.); and the Department of Statistics, Kansas State University (D.J.), Manhattan Kan.
Correspondence to Pamela W. Duncan, PhD, PT, Center on Aging, University of Kansas Medical Center, 3901 Rainbow Boulevard, Kansas City, KS 66160-7117. E-mail pduncan{at}kumc.edu
Background and PurposeTo be useful for clinical research, an outcome measure must be feasible to administer and have sound psychometric attributes, including reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change. This study characterizes the psychometric properties of the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) Version 2.0.
MethodsVersion 2.0 of the SIS is a self-report measure that includes 64 items and assesses 8 domains (strength, hand function, ADL/IADL, mobility, communication, emotion, memory and thinking, and participation). Subjects with mild and moderate strokes completed the SIS at 1 month (n=91), at 3 months (n=80), and at 6 months after stroke (n=69). Twenty-five subjects had a replicate administration of the SIS 1 week after the 3-month or 6-month test. We evaluated internal consistency and test-retest reliability. The validity of the SIS domains was examined by comparing the SIS to existing stroke measures and by comparing differences in SIS scores across Rankin scale levels. The mixed model procedure was used to evaluate responsiveness of the SIS domain scores to change.
ResultsEach of the 8 domains met or approached the standard of
0.9
-coefficient for comparing the same patients across time. The
intraclass correlation coefficients for test-retest reliability of SIS
domains ranged from 0.70 to 0.92, except for the emotion domain (0.57).
When the domains were compared with established outcome measures, the
correlations were moderate to strong (0.44 to 0.84). The participation
domain was most strongly associated with SF-36 social role function.
SIS domain scores discriminated across 4 Rankin levels. SIS domains are
responsive to change due to ongoing recovery. Responsiveness to change
is affected by stroke severity and time since stroke.
ConclusionsThis new, stroke-specific outcome measure is reliable, valid, and sensitive to change. We are optimistic about the utility of measure. More studies are required to evaluate the SIS in larger and more heterogeneous populations and to evaluate the feasibility and validity of proxy responses for the most severely impaired patients.
Key Words: stroke outcome outcome assessment reproducibility of results
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