Author:
Theou Olga,Andrew Melissa,Ahip Sally Suriani,Squires Emma,McGarrigle Lisa,Blodgett Joanna M.,Goldstein Judah,Hominick Kathryn,Godin Judith,Hougan Glen,Armstrong Joshua J.,Wallace Lindsay,Ghazali Sazlina Shariff,Moorhouse Paige,Fay Sherri,Visvanathan Renuka,Rockwood Kenneth
Abstract
BackgroundStandardized frailty assessments are needed for early iden-tification and treatment. We aimed to develop a frailty scale using visual images, the Pictorial Fit-Frail Scale (PFFS), and to examine its feasibility and content validity.MethodsIn Phase 1, a multidisciplinary team identified domains for measurement, operationalized impairment levels, and re-viewed visual languages for the scale. In Phase 2, feedback was sought from health professionals and the general public. In Phase 3, 366 participants completed preliminary testing on the revised draft, including 162 UK paramedics, and rated the scale on feasibility and usability. In Phase 4, following translation into Malay, the final prototype was tested in 95 participants in Peninsular Malaysia and Borneo.ResultsThe final scale incorporated 14 domains, each conceptual-ized with 3–6 response levels. All domains were rated as “understood well” by most participants (range 64–94%). Percentage agreement with positive statements regarding appearance, feasibility, and usefulness ranged from 66% to 95%. Overall feedback from health-care professionals sup-ported its content validity.ConclusionsThe PFFS is comprehensive, feasible, and appears gener-alizable across countries, and has face and content validity. Investigation into the reliability and predictive validity of the scale is currently underway.
Publisher
Canadian Geriatrics Society
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology
Cited by
27 articles.
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