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Development and initial validation of the Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I).

Development and initial validation of the Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I).
Development and initial validation of the Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I).
Background: there is a need for a measure of fear of falling that assesses both easy and difficult physical activities and social activities and is suitable for use in a range of languages and cultural contexts, permitting direct comparison between studies and populations in different countries and settings.
Objective: to develop a modified version of the Falls Efficacy Scale to satisfy this need, and to establish its psychometric properties, reliability, and concurrent validity (i.e. that it demonstrates the expected relationship with age, falls history and falls risk factors).
Design: cross-sectional survey.
Setting: community sample.
Method: 704 people aged between 60 and 95 years completed The Falls Efficacy Scale-International (FES-I) either in postal self-completion format or by structured interview.
Results: the FES-I had excellent internal and test–retest reliability (Cronbach’s =0.96, ICC=0.96). Factor analysis suggested a unitary underlying factor, with two dimensions assessing concern about less demanding physical activities mainly in the home, and concern about more demanding physical activities mainly outside the home. The FES-I had slightly better power than the original FES items to discriminate differences in concern about falling between groups differentiated by sex, age, occupation, falls in the past year, and falls risk factors (chronic illness, taking multiple or psychoactive medications, dizziness).
Conclusions: the FES-I has close continuity with the best existing measure of fear of falling, excellent psychometric properties, and assesses concerns relating to basic and more demanding activities, both physical and social. Further research is required to confirm cross-cultural and predictive validity.
quality of life, accidental falls, aged, questionnaires, elderly
0002-0729
614-619
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Beyer, N.
43bf9c74-5951-47b7-830b-a2a670121515
Hauer, K.
0e4d7adc-696b-4ae1-9bc8-6634b3aeb854
Kempen, G.
503a8b50-886c-40e4-a978-6e228a9ec9b5
Piot-Ziegler, C.
7d17aa59-3a82-4335-8539-cee99753c351
Todd, C.
fe86020b-6f0f-4226-a76f-089654c5163d
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Beyer, N.
43bf9c74-5951-47b7-830b-a2a670121515
Hauer, K.
0e4d7adc-696b-4ae1-9bc8-6634b3aeb854
Kempen, G.
503a8b50-886c-40e4-a978-6e228a9ec9b5
Piot-Ziegler, C.
7d17aa59-3a82-4335-8539-cee99753c351
Todd, C.
fe86020b-6f0f-4226-a76f-089654c5163d

Yardley, L., Beyer, N., Hauer, K., Kempen, G., Piot-Ziegler, C. and Todd, C. (2005) Development and initial validation of the Falls Efficacy Scale International (FES-I). Age and Ageing, 34 (6), 614-619. (doi:10.1093/ageing/afi196).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: there is a need for a measure of fear of falling that assesses both easy and difficult physical activities and social activities and is suitable for use in a range of languages and cultural contexts, permitting direct comparison between studies and populations in different countries and settings.
Objective: to develop a modified version of the Falls Efficacy Scale to satisfy this need, and to establish its psychometric properties, reliability, and concurrent validity (i.e. that it demonstrates the expected relationship with age, falls history and falls risk factors).
Design: cross-sectional survey.
Setting: community sample.
Method: 704 people aged between 60 and 95 years completed The Falls Efficacy Scale-International (FES-I) either in postal self-completion format or by structured interview.
Results: the FES-I had excellent internal and test–retest reliability (Cronbach’s =0.96, ICC=0.96). Factor analysis suggested a unitary underlying factor, with two dimensions assessing concern about less demanding physical activities mainly in the home, and concern about more demanding physical activities mainly outside the home. The FES-I had slightly better power than the original FES items to discriminate differences in concern about falling between groups differentiated by sex, age, occupation, falls in the past year, and falls risk factors (chronic illness, taking multiple or psychoactive medications, dizziness).
Conclusions: the FES-I has close continuity with the best existing measure of fear of falling, excellent psychometric properties, and assesses concerns relating to basic and more demanding activities, both physical and social. Further research is required to confirm cross-cultural and predictive validity.

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Published date: 2005
Keywords: quality of life, accidental falls, aged, questionnaires, elderly

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 40199
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40199
ISSN: 0002-0729
PURE UUID: 604e5b5a-ac7e-4616-80db-16263644e815
ORCID for L. Yardley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3853-883X

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: L. Yardley ORCID iD
Author: N. Beyer
Author: K. Hauer
Author: G. Kempen
Author: C. Piot-Ziegler
Author: C. Todd

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