The Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I). A comprehensive longitudinal validation study
UNSW Sydney · Ghent University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
this study aimed to perform a comprehensive validation of the 16-item and 7-item Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I) by investigating the overall structure and measurement properties, convergent and predictive validity and responsiveness to change. METHOD: five hundred community-dwelling older people (70-90 years) were assessed on the FES-I in conjunction with demographic, physiological and neuropsychological measures at baseline and at 12 months. Falls were monitored monthly and fear of falling every 3 months.
the overall structure and measurement properties of both FES-I scales, as evaluated with item response theory, were good. Discriminative ability on physiological and neuropsychological measures indicated excellent validity, both at baseline (n = 500, convergent validity) and at 1-year follow-up (n = 463, predictive validity). The longitudinal follow-up suggested that FES-I scores increased over time regardless of any fall event, with a trend for a stronger increase in FES-I scores when a person suffered multiple falls in a 3-month period. Additionally, using receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves, cut-points were defined to differentiate between lower and higher levels of concern.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.18
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
6- KDKim DelbaereCorresponding
UNSW Sydney, Ghent University, Neuroscience Research Australia
- JCJacqueline Close
UNSW Sydney, Prince of Wales Hospital, Neuroscience Research Australia
- ASA. Stefanie Mikolaizak
UNSW Sydney, Neuroscience Research Australia
- PSPerminder S. Sachdev
UNSW Sydney, Prince of Wales Hospital
- HBHenry Brodaty
UNSW Sydney, Prince of Wales Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Convergent validity
- Predictive validity
- Medicine
- Receiver operating characteristic
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
- Fear of falling
- Scale (ratio)
- Physical therapy
- Reduced inequalities