Intra- and Inter-Rater Reliability of the Assessment of Children's Hand Skills Based on Video Recordings

Author:

Chien Chi-Wen1,Scanlon Clare2,Rodger Sylvia3,Copley Jodie4

Affiliation:

1. Postdoctoral Research Fellow, The University of Queensland, Occupational Therapy Division, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

2. Honours Student, The University of Queensland, Occupational Therapy Division, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

3. Professor, The University of Queensland, Occupational Therapy Division, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

4. Senior Lecturer, The University of Queensland, Occupational Therapy Division, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia

Abstract

Introduction: Hand skills are essential for children's occupational performance. The Assessment of Children's Hand Skills is a new assessment that utilizes naturalistic observations to capture children's actual hand-skill performance in everyday contexts. This study aimed to explore intra- and inter-rater reliability of the assessment based on video recordings, which are different from original naturalistic observations. Method: Two raters scored video recordings of 54 hand-skill activities performed by 12 children with developmental disabilities, twice in 2 weeks. Intra- and inter-rater reliability was examined at the individual hand-skill item scores, activity scores, and children's composite scores of the Assessment of Children's Hand Skills. Findings: Intra-rater reliability at item levels was generally acceptable, and both raters exhibited moderate to high agreement between the first and second evaluations (intraclass correlation coefficients = 0.61–0.93) at activity scores and children's composite scores. However, the agreement between the two raters was unacceptable for most hand-skill items and activity scores. After rater effects were adjusted by Rasch analysis in children's composite scores, the inter-rater reliability was improved (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.81). Conclusion: This study shows that the Assessment of Children's Hand Skills based on video recordings is reliable within the same raters. Further research is required to confirm its inter-rater reliability by involving more training and raters with varied clinical experience.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Occupational Therapy

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