Preliminary analysis of reliability and validity of the Life Space Questionnaire as a real-world mobility measure for people with lower limb loss: A technical note.
Gregory A YoudanStanford T ChihuriChristopher K WongPublished in: Prosthetics and orthotics international (2022)
People with lower-limb loss (PLL) often have reduced mobility that translates into limited community access. The Life Space Questionnaire (LSQ) measures a person's real-world mobility within their home environment and community but has not been used among PLL. This study assessed preliminary LSQ test-retest reliability and discriminant validity from subjective and objective balance and walking measures in PLL. In addition, LSQ was hypothesized to have an inverse association with overall health status. Nine subjects were analyzed with mean age 48.2 ± 13.1 years and 4.8 ± 3.9 years' time since amputation. Six had transtibial and three had transfemoral amputations due to diabetes (4), vascular disease (3), and trauma (2). The primary outcome was the LSQ, a 9-level scale quantifying the extent to which people accessed their life space including home, yard, and community. Test-retest reliability for the LSQ was moderate (intraclass coefficient = 0.61 with 90% confidence interval: 0.19-0.87). Discriminant validity from balance and walking function was demonstrated by lack of correlation between LSQ score and the Activities-specific Balance Confidence and Berg Balance Scale and the Prosthetic Evaluation Questionnaire mobility subscale and walking speed (r < 0.50, P > .05). LSQ correlated with health status assessed with the Charlson Comorbidity Index (r = -0.84, P = .005). In this sample of PLL, the LSQ demonstrated moderate test-retest reliability as a measure of real-world mobility distinct as a construct from subjective and objective balance or walking measures. People may access their communities using various levels of assistance and methods of transportation. For this sample of PLL, health status was most strongly associated with LSQ score.