MacDermid Joy C, Brooks Dina, Solway Sherra, Switzer-McIntyre Sharon, Brosseau Lucie, Graham Ian D
School of Rehabilitation Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2005 Mar 2;5(1):18. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-5-18.
The AGREE instrument has been validated for evaluating Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) pertaining to medical care. This study evaluated the reliability and validity of physical therapists using the AGREE to assess quality of CPGs relevant to physical therapy practice.
A total of 69 physical therapists participated and were classified as generalists, specialist or researchers. Pairs of appraisers within each category evaluated independently, a set of 6 CPG selected at random from a pool of 55 CPGs.
Reliability between pairs of appraisers indicated low to high reliability depending on the domain and number of appraisers (0.17-0.81 for single appraiser; 0.30-0.96 when score averaged across a pair of appraisers). The highest reliability was achieved for Rigour of Development, which exceeded ICC> 0.79, if scores from pairs of appraisers were pooled. Adding more than 3 appraisers did not consistently improve reliability. Appraiser type did not determine reliability scores. End-users, including study participants and a separate sample of 102 physical therapy students, found the AGREE useful to guide critical appraisal. The construct validity of the AGREE was supported in that expected differences on Rigour of Development domains were observed between expert panels versus those with no/uncertain expertise (differences of 10-21% p = 0.09-0.001). Factor analysis with varimax rotation, produced a 4-factor solution that was similar, although not in exact agreement with the AGREE Domains. Validity was also supported by the correlation observed (Kendall-tao = 0.69) between Overall Assessment and the Rigour of Development domain.
These findings suggest that the AGREE instrument is reliable and valid when used by physiotherapists to assess the quality of CPG pertaining to physical therapy health services.
AGREE工具已被验证可用于评估与医疗保健相关的临床实践指南(CPG)。本研究评估了物理治疗师使用AGREE评估与物理治疗实践相关的CPG质量的可靠性和有效性。
共有69名物理治疗师参与,分为通科医生、专科医生或研究人员。每个类别中的评估者对从55份CPG中随机选择的一组6份CPG进行独立评估。
评估者之间的可靠性表明,根据领域和评估者数量,可靠性从低到高(单个评估者为0.17 - 0.81;一对评估者的分数平均时为0.30 - 0.96)。如果汇总一对评估者的分数,“制定的严谨性”的可靠性最高,超过组内相关系数(ICC)> 0.79。增加超过3名评估者并不能持续提高可靠性。评估者类型不能决定可靠性分数。最终用户,包括研究参与者和102名物理治疗专业学生的单独样本,发现AGREE有助于指导批判性评价。AGREE的结构效度得到支持,因为在专家小组与没有/不确定专业知识的小组之间观察到了“制定的严谨性”领域的预期差异(差异为10 - 21%,p = 0.09 - 0.001)。采用方差最大化旋转的因子分析产生了一个4因子解决方案,该方案与AGREE领域相似,尽管不完全一致。总体评估与“制定的严谨性”领域之间观察到的相关性(肯德尔系数= 0.69)也支持了效度。
这些发现表明,当物理治疗师使用AGREE工具评估与物理治疗健康服务相关的CPG质量时,该工具是可靠且有效的。