Title of article :
Pre- and Postintervention Factor Structure of Functional Independence Measure in Patients with Spinal Cord Injury
Author/Authors :
Laimi, Katri Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine - Turku University Hospital and University of Turku - Turku, Finland , Saltychev, Mikhail Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine - Turku University Hospital and University of Turku - Turku, Finland , Jokinen, Petteri Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine - Turku University Hospital and University of Turku - Turku, Finland , Lähdesmäki, Janne Division of Clinical Neurosciences - Turku University Hospital and University of Turku - Turku, Finland
Abstract :
To evaluate the factor structure of Functional Independence Measure (FIM) scale amongst people with spinal cord
injury (SCI). Methods. This was a retrospective, register-based cohort study on 155 rehabilitants with SCI. FIM was assessed
at the beginning and at the end of multidisciplinary inpatient rehabilitation. The internal consistency of the FIM was assessed
with Cronbach’s alpha and exploratory factor analysis was employed to approximate the construct structure of FIM. Results. The
internal consistency demonstrated high Cronbach’s alpha of 0.95 to 0.96. For both pre- and postintervention assessments, the
exploratory factor analysis resulted in 3-factor structures. Except for two items (“walking or using a wheelchair” and “expression”),
the structures of the identified three factors remained the same from the beginning to the end of rehabilitation. The loadings of
all items were sufficient, exceeding 0.3. Both pre- and postintervention chi-square tests showed significant 𝑝values <0.0001. The
“motor” domain was divided into two factors with this 2-factor structure enduring through the intervention period. Conclusions.
Amongst rehabilitants with SCI, FIM failed to demonstrate unidimensionality. Instead, it showed a 3-factor structure that fluctuated
only little depending on the timing of measurement. Additionally, when measured separately, also motor score was 2-dimensional,
not 1-dimensional. Using a total or subscale FIM, scores seem to be unjustified in the studied population.
Keywords :
Pre- and Postintervention Factor Structure , Functional Independence Measure , Patients , Spinal Cord Injury , SCI , FIM
Journal title :
Rehabilitation Research and Practice