Parents’ and Therapists’ Satisfaction with Four Early Childhood Power Mobility Devices

Author:

Field Debra AORCID,Livingstone Roslyn W

Abstract

Background. Little is known about satisfaction with power mobility devices used by young children. Purpose. Parents’ and therapists’ satisfaction with four early childhood power mobility devices were examined. Method. A two-phased study, comprising Trial Phase cross-sectional design and Loan Phase one-group pretest-posttest design. Parents and therapists of children 9 months to 6 years with mobility limitations completed the Quebec User Evaluation of Satisfaction of Assistive Technology 2.0 Device Subscale (QUEST8) plus an additional device Aesthetics rating. Findings. Seventy-four parents and 42 therapists from 18 child development and rehabilitation centres participated. Parent and therapist median QUEST8 and Aesthetics scores varied across devices when trialled and over the six-month loan. Favourable median ratings had no statistically significant differences between parents and therapists. Parent ratings decreased statistically over loan period although therapists’ ratings did not. Device dimensions, safety, and aesthetics were highly rated. Implications. Similarities and differences exist among parent and therapist ratings.

Funder

Posture & Mobility Group

Sunny Hill Health Centre for Children

British Columbia Children’s Hospital Research Institute

Sunny Hill Foundation for Children

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Occupational Therapy

Reference37 articles.

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5. Canadian Agency for Drugs and Technologies in Health (2015). Power Mobility Technologies for Children Aged Six Years and Under with Disability or Mobility Limitation: Clinical Effectiveness and Guidelines. Retrieved from https://www.cadth.ca/power-mobility-technologies-children-aged-six-years-and-under-disability-or-mobility-limitation.

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