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1extending the floor and the ceiling for assessment of physical function.
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1extending the floor and the ceiling for assessment of physical function. Arthritis and rheumatism Fries, J. F., Lingala, B. n., Siemons, L. n., Glas, C. A., Cella, D. n., Hussain, Y. N., Bruce, B. n., Krishnan, E. n. 2014Abstract
Objective. The objective of the current study was to improve the assessment of physical function by improving the precision of assessment at the floor (extremely poor function) and at the ceiling (extremely good health) of the health continuum. Methods. Under the NIH PROMIS program, we developed new physical function floor and ceiling items to supplement the existing item bank. Using item response theory (IRT) and the standard PROMIS methodology, we developed 30 floor items and 26 ceiling items and administered them during a 12-month prospective observational study of 737 individuals at the extremes of health status. Change over time was compared across anchor instruments and across items by means of effect sizes. Using the observed changes in scores, we back-calculated sample size requirements for the new and comparison measures. Results. We studied 444 subjects with chronic illness and/or extreme age, and 293 generally fit subjects including athletes in training. IRT analyses confirmed that the new floor and ceiling items outperformed reference items (p<0.001). The estimated post-hoc sample size requirements were reduced by a factor of two to four at the floor and a factor of two at the ceiling. Conclusion. Extending the range of physical function measurement can substantially improve measurement quality, can reduce sample size requirements and improve ÌÇÐÄ´«Ã½ efficiency. The paradigm shift from Disability to Physical Function includes the entire spectrum of physical function, signals improvement in the conceptual base of outcome assessment, and may be transformative as medical goals more closely approach societal goals for health. © 2013 American College of Rheumatology.
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