%0 Journal Article %J Quality of Life Research %D 2009 %T Replenishing a computerized adaptive test of patient-reported daily activity functioning %A Haley, S. M. %A Ni, P. %A Jette, A. M. %A Tao, W. %A Moed, R. %A Meyers, D. %A Ludlow, L. H. %K *Activities of Daily Living %K *Disability Evaluation %K *Questionnaires %K *User-Computer Interface %K Adult %K Aged %K Cohort Studies %K Computer-Assisted Instruction %K Female %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Outcome Assessment (Health Care)/*methods %X PURPOSE: Computerized adaptive testing (CAT) item banks may need to be updated, but before new items can be added, they must be linked to the previous CAT. The purpose of this study was to evaluate 41 pretest items prior to including them into an operational CAT. METHODS: We recruited 6,882 patients with spine, lower extremity, upper extremity, and nonorthopedic impairments who received outpatient rehabilitation in one of 147 clinics across 13 states of the USA. Forty-one new Daily Activity (DA) items were administered along with the Activity Measure for Post-Acute Care Daily Activity CAT (DA-CAT-1) in five separate waves. We compared the scoring consistency with the full item bank, test information function (TIF), person standard errors (SEs), and content range of the DA-CAT-1 to the new CAT (DA-CAT-2) with the pretest items by real data simulations. RESULTS: We retained 29 of the 41 pretest items. Scores from the DA-CAT-2 were more consistent (ICC = 0.90 versus 0.96) than DA-CAT-1 when compared with the full item bank. TIF and person SEs were improved for persons with higher levels of DA functioning, and ceiling effects were reduced from 16.1% to 6.1%. CONCLUSIONS: Item response theory and online calibration methods were valuable in improving the DA-CAT. %B Quality of Life Research %7 2009/03/17 %V 18 %P 461-71 %8 May %@ 0962-9343 (Print)0962-9343 (Linking) %G eng %M 19288222 %0 Journal Article %J American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation %D 2005 %T Measuring physical function in patients with complex medical and postsurgical conditions: a computer adaptive approach %A Siebens, H. %A Andres, P. L. %A Pengsheng, N. %A Coster, W. J. %A Haley, S. M. %K Activities of Daily Living/*classification %K Adult %K Aged %K Cohort Studies %K Continuity of Patient Care %K Disability Evaluation %K Female %K Health Services Research %K Humans %K Male %K Middle Aged %K Postoperative Care/*rehabilitation %K Prognosis %K Recovery of Function %K Rehabilitation Centers %K Rehabilitation/*standards %K Sensitivity and Specificity %K Sickness Impact Profile %K Treatment Outcome %X OBJECTIVE: To examine whether the range of disability in the medically complex and postsurgical populations receiving rehabilitation is adequately sampled by the new Activity Measure--Post-Acute Care (AM-PAC), and to assess whether computer adaptive testing (CAT) can derive valid patient scores using fewer questions. DESIGN: Observational study of 158 subjects (mean age 67.2 yrs) receiving skilled rehabilitation services in inpatient (acute rehabilitation hospitals, skilled nursing facility units) and community (home health services, outpatient departments) settings for recent-onset or worsening disability from medical (excluding neurological) and surgical (excluding orthopedic) conditions. Measures were interviewer-administered activity questions (all patients) and physical functioning portion of the SF-36 (outpatients) and standardized chart items (11 Functional Independence Measure (FIM), 19 Standardized Outcome and Assessment Information Set (OASIS) items, and 22 Minimum Data Set (MDS) items). Rasch modeling analyzed all data and the relationship between person ability estimates and average item difficulty. CAT assessed the ability to derive accurate patient scores using a sample of questions. RESULTS: The 163-item activity item pool covered the range of physical movement and personal and instrumental activities. CAT analysis showed comparable scores between estimates using 10 items or the total item pool. CONCLUSION: The AM-PAC can assess a broad range of function in patients with complex medical illness. CAT achieves valid patient scores using fewer questions. %B American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation %V 84 %P 741-8 %8 Oct %G eng %M 16205429