TY - JOUR
T1 - The Chelsea critical care physical assessment tool (CPAx)
T2 - validation of an innovative new tool to measure physical morbidity in the general adult critical care population; an observational proof-of-concept pilot study
AU - Corner, E. J.
A2 - Englebretsen, C.
A2 - Thomas, A.
A2 - Grant, R. L.
A2 - Nikoletou, D.
A2 - Soni, N.
PY - 2013/3
Y1 - 2013/3
N2 - Abstract
Objective To develop a scoring system to measure physical morbidity in critical care - the Chelsea Critical Care Physical Assessment Tool
(CPAx).
Method The development process was iterative involving content validity indices (CVI), a focus group and an observational study of 33
patients to test construct validity against the Medical Research Council score for muscle strength, peak cough flow, Australian Therapy
Outcome Measures score, Glasgow Coma Scale score, Bloomsbury sedation score, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score, Short Form
36 (SF-36) score, days of mechanical ventilation and inter-rater reliability.
Participants Trauma and general critical care patients from two London teaching hospitals.
Results Users of the CPAx felt that it possessed content validity, giving a final CVI of 1.00 (P < 0.05). Construct validation data showed
moderate to strong significant correlations between the CPAx score and all secondary measures, apart from the mental component of the
SF-36 which demonstrated weak correlation with the CPAx score (r = 0.024, P = 0.720). Reliability testing showed internal consistency of
α = 0.798 and inter-rater reliability of ╬║ = 0.988 (95% confidence interval 0.791 to 1.000) between five raters.
Conclusion This pilot work supports proof of concept of the CPAx as a measure of physical morbidity in the critical care population, and is
a cogent argument for further investigation of the scoring system.
AB - Abstract
Objective To develop a scoring system to measure physical morbidity in critical care - the Chelsea Critical Care Physical Assessment Tool
(CPAx).
Method The development process was iterative involving content validity indices (CVI), a focus group and an observational study of 33
patients to test construct validity against the Medical Research Council score for muscle strength, peak cough flow, Australian Therapy
Outcome Measures score, Glasgow Coma Scale score, Bloomsbury sedation score, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment score, Short Form
36 (SF-36) score, days of mechanical ventilation and inter-rater reliability.
Participants Trauma and general critical care patients from two London teaching hospitals.
Results Users of the CPAx felt that it possessed content validity, giving a final CVI of 1.00 (P < 0.05). Construct validation data showed
moderate to strong significant correlations between the CPAx score and all secondary measures, apart from the mental component of the
SF-36 which demonstrated weak correlation with the CPAx score (r = 0.024, P = 0.720). Reliability testing showed internal consistency of
α = 0.798 and inter-rater reliability of ╬║ = 0.988 (95% confidence interval 0.791 to 1.000) between five raters.
Conclusion This pilot work supports proof of concept of the CPAx as a measure of physical morbidity in the critical care population, and is
a cogent argument for further investigation of the scoring system.
KW - Health services research
UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23219649
U2 - 10.1016/j.physio.2012.01.003
DO - 10.1016/j.physio.2012.01.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 23219649
SN - 0031-9406
VL - 99
SP - 33
EP - 41
JO - Physiotherapy
JF - Physiotherapy
IS - 1
ER -