Kramer Jessica M, Liljenquist Kendra, Coster Wendy J
Department of Occupational Therapy, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Rehabilitation Sciences Program, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Dev Med Child Neurol. 2016 Mar;58(3):255-61. doi: 10.1111/dmcn.12837. Epub 2015 Jun 22.
This study aimed to explore the test-retest reliability of the Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory-Computer Adaptive Test for autism spectrum disorders (PEDI-CAT [ASD]), the concurrent validity of this test with the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (VABS-II), and parents' perceptions of usability.
A convenience sample of participants (n=39) was recruited nationally through disability organizations. Parents of young people aged 10 to 18 years (mean age 14y 10mo, SD 2y 8mo; 34 males, five females) who reported a diagnosis of autism were eligible to participate. Parents completed the VABS-II questionnaire once and the PEDI-CAT (ASD) twice (n=29) no more than 3 weeks apart (mean 12d) using computer-simulated administration. Parents also answered questions about the usability of these instruments. We examined score reliability using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and we explored the relationship between instruments using Spearman's rank correlation coefficients. Parent responses were grouped by common content; content categories were triangulated by an additional reviewer.
Intraclass correlation coefficients indicate excellent reliability for all PEDI-CAT (ASD) domain scores (ICC ≥ 0.86). PEDI-CAT (ASD) and VABS-II domain scores correlated as expected or stronger than expected (0.57-0.81). Parents reported that the computer-based PEDI-CAT (ASD) was easy to use and included fewer irrelevant questions than the VABS-II instrument.
These findings suggest that the PEDI-CAT (ASD) is a reliable assessment that parents can easily use. The PEDI-CAT (ASD) operationalizes the International Classification of Function, Disability and Health for Children and Youth constructs of 'activity' and 'participation', and this preliminary research suggests that the instrument's constructs are related to those of VABS-II.
本研究旨在探讨用于自闭症谱系障碍的儿童残疾评估量表-计算机自适应测试(PEDI-CAT [ASD])的重测信度、该测试与文兰适应行为量表(VABS-II)的同时效度,以及家长对其易用性的看法。
通过残疾组织在全国范围内招募了一个便利样本的参与者(n = 39)。年龄在10至18岁(平均年龄14岁10个月,标准差2岁8个月;34名男性,5名女性)且报告患有自闭症诊断的青少年的父母有资格参与。父母使用计算机模拟管理方式,一次完成VABS-II问卷,两次完成PEDI-CAT(ASD)(n = 29),两次间隔不超过3周(平均12天)。父母还回答了有关这些工具易用性的问题。我们使用组内相关系数(ICC)检查分数信度,并使用斯皮尔曼等级相关系数探索工具之间的关系。家长的回答按共同内容分组;内容类别由另一位审阅者进行三角验证。
组内相关系数表明所有PEDI-CAT(ASD)领域分数具有出色的信度(ICC≥0.86)。PEDI-CAT(ASD)和VABS-II领域分数的相关性符合预期或强于预期(0.57 - 0.81)。家长报告说,基于计算机的PEDI-CAT(ASD)易于使用,且比VABS-II工具包含的无关问题更少。
这些发现表明PEDI-CAT(ASD)是一种可靠的评估工具,家长可以轻松使用。PEDI-CAT(ASD)将《儿童和青少年功能、残疾与健康国际分类》中的“活动”和“参与”结构进行了操作化,这项初步研究表明该工具的结构与VABS-II的结构相关。