Objective: To assess the reliability of a 9-task wheelchair circuit.
Design: Three test trials per subject were conducted by 2 raters. Inter- and intrarater reliability were examined.
Setting: Eight rehabilitation centers in the Netherlands.
Participants: Convenience sample of 27 patients (age, >or=18 y) with spinal cord injury (SCI), all of whom were in the final stage of their inpatient rehabilitation.
Intervention: A wheelchair circuit was developed to assess mobility in subjects with SCI. The circuit consisted of 9 tasks: figure-of-8 shape, doorstep crossing, mounting a platform, sprint, walking, driving up treadmill slopes of 3% and 6%, wheelchair driving and transfer.
Main outcome measure: Task feasibility, task performance time, and peak heart rates.
Results: The number of tasks that subjects could perform varied from 3 to 9. Feasibility intrarater reliability was.98, and the interrater reliability intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was.97. Performance time ICCs ranged from.70 to.99 (mean,.88) for intrarater reliability and from.76 to.98 (mean,.92) for interrater reliability. Heart rate ICCs ranged from.64 to.96 (mean,.81) for intrarater reliability and from.82 to.99 (mean,.89) for interrater reliability.
Conclusions: The reliability of the wheelchair circuit was good. More research is needed to assess test validity and responsiveness.
Copyright 2002 by the American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation