Abstract
Background and Purpose. The Continuous-Scale Physical Functional Performance Test (CS-PFP) can be used to obtain valid, reliable, and sensitive measurements of physical functional capacity. This test requires a fixed laboratory space and approximately 1 hour to administer. This study was carried out in 4 steps, or substudies, to develop and validate a short, community-based version (PFP-10) that requires less space and equipment than the CS-PFP. Subjects and Methods. Retrospective data (n = 228) and prospective data (n = 91) on men and women performing the CS-PFP or the PFP-10 are reported. A 12-week exercise program was used to examine sensitivity to change. Data analyses were done using paired t-test, Pearson correlation, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and delta index (DI) procedures. Results. The PFP-10 total score and 4 of the 5 domain scores were statistically similar (within 3%) to those of the CS-PFP. The PFP-10 upper-body strength domain score was 17% lower, but was highly correlated (ICC=.97). Community and established laboratory PFP-10 scores were similar (ICC = .85-.97). The PFP-10 also is sensitive to change (DI = .21-.54). Discussion and Conclusion. The PFP-10 yields valid, reliable, and sensitive measurements and can be confidently substituted for the CS-PFP.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Cress, M. E., Petrella, J. K., Moore, T. L., & Schenkman, M. L. (2005). Continuous-Scale Physical Functional Performance Test: Validity, reliability, and sensitivity of data for the short version. Physical Therapy, 85(4), 323–335. https://doi.org/10.1093/ptj/85.4.323
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.