Minimal important change in physical function in trauma patients: a study using the short musculoskeletal function assessment
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Title
Minimal important change in physical function in trauma patients: a study using the short musculoskeletal function assessment
Authors
Keywords
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Journal
QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Online
2020-04-04
DOI
10.1007/s11136-020-02476-8
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Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- The Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment: a study of the reliability, construct validity and responsiveness in patients sustaining trauma
- (2019) Max W de Graaf et al. CLINICAL REHABILITATION
- Structural Validity of the Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment in Injured Patients
- (2018) Max W de Graaf et al. PHYSICAL THERAPY
- The anchor-based minimal important change, based on receiver operating characteristic analysis or predictive modeling, may need to be adjusted for the proportion of improved patients
- (2017) Berend Terluin et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Reliability, validity, responsiveness, and minimal important change of the Disabilities of the Arm, Shoulder and Hand and Constant-Murley scores in patients with a humeral shaft fracture
- (2017) Kiran C. Mahabier et al. JOURNAL OF SHOULDER AND ELBOW SURGERY
- Psychometric properties of the Musculoskeletal Function Assessment and the Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment: a systematic review
- (2015) Jason Bouffard et al. CLINICAL REHABILITATION
- Minimal important change (MIC) based on a predictive modeling approach was more precise than MIC based on ROC analysis
- (2015) Berend Terluin et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Minimally important change values of a measurement instrument depend more on baseline values than on the type of intervention
- (2015) Henrica C.W. de Vet et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Responsiveness of SF-36 and Lower Extremity Functional Scale for assessing outcomes in traumatic injuries of lower extremities
- (2014) Shin-Liang Pan et al. INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED
- Patients' ratings of global perceived change during 2 years were strongly influenced by the current health status
- (2014) Lars Grøvle et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki
- (2013) JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
- Psychometric analysis of measuring functional outcomes in tibial plateau fractures using the Short Form 36 (SF-36), Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment (SMFA) and the Western Ontario McMaster Osteoarthritis (WOMAC) questionnaires
- (2012) R. Dattani et al. INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED
- Cross-cultural adaptation of the Dutch Short Musculoskeletal Function Assessment questionnaire (SMFA-NL): Internal consistency, validity, repeatability and responsiveness
- (2011) Inge H.F. Reininga et al. INJURY-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE CARE OF THE INJURED
- Rating the methodological quality in systematic reviews of studies on measurement properties: a scoring system for the COSMIN checklist
- (2011) Caroline B. Terwee et al. QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
- Global Perceived Effect scales provided reliable assessments of health transition in people with musculoskeletal disorders, but ratings are strongly influenced by current status
- (2010) Steven J. Kamper et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- The COSMIN study reached international consensus on taxonomy, terminology, and definitions of measurement properties for health-related patient-reported outcomes
- (2010) Lidwine B. Mokkink et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Responsiveness of the short musculoskeletal function assessment (SMFA) in patients with femoral neck fractures
- (2010) Carl Johan Hedbeck et al. QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
- Use of both short musculoskeletal function assessment questionnaire and short form-36 among tibial-fracture patients was redundant
- (2009) Jason W. Busse et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Linking measurement error to minimal important change of patient-reported outcomes
- (2009) Caroline B. Terwee et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Mind the MIC: large variation among populations and methods
- (2009) Caroline B. Terwee et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Three ways to quantify uncertainty in individually applied “minimally important change” values
- (2009) Henrica C.W. de Vet et al. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
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