Abstract

Purpose: To translate and perform a cross-cultural adaptation of the Late-Life Function and Disability Instrument (LLFDI) to Swedish, to investigate absolute and relative reliability, concurrent validity, and floor and ceiling effects within a Swedish-speaking sample of community-dwelling older adults with self-reported balance deficits and fear of falling. Method: Translation, reliability and validation study of the LLFDI. Sixty-two community-dwelling, healthy older adults (54 women and 8 men) aged 68–88 years with balance deficits and fear of falling performed the LLFDI twice with an interval of 2 weeks. Results: Test–retest agreement, intra-class correlation coefficient was very good, 0.87–0.91 in the LLFDI function component and 0.82–0.91 in the LLFDI disability component. The standard error of measure was small, 5–9%, and the smallest real difference was 14–24%. Internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) was high (0.90–0.96). Correlation with the SF-36 PCS and PF-10 was moderate in both LLFDI function, r = 0.39–0.68 and r = 0.35–0.52, and LLFDI disability, r = 0.40–0.63 and 0.34–0.57, respectively. There was no floor or ceiling effects. Conclusion: The Swedish version of the LLFDI is a highly reliable and valid instrument for assessing function and disability in community-dwelling older women with self-reported balance deficits and fear of falling.Implications for RehabilitationThe Swedish LLFDI is a highly reliable and valid instrument for assessing function and disability in older women with self-reported balance deficits and fear of falling.The instrument may be used both in clinical settings and in research.The instrument is sensitive to change and a reasonably small improvement is enough to detect changes in a group or a single individual.

Highlights

  • Older adults are the most rapidly growing part of the population worldwide

  • Absolute reliability showed that the measurement error on group level (SEM) was 2.9–5.1 (5–9%)

  • This study showed that the test–retest reliability of the Swedish version of the Late-Life Function and Disability Instrument (LLFDI) was very good in healthy older adults with balance deficits and fear of falling, for both the function and the disability components, indicating that the questionnaire is stable over time

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Summary

Introduction

Assessing function and disability in late life is crucial for estimating the impact of aging and diseases on activities in daily life, establishing care and rehabilitation services, as well as measure the effects of different interventions. Self-report measures are found to be the most valid and costeffective methods of obtaining function and disability information in older adults [1]. The Late-Life Function and Disability Instrument (LLFDI), launched in 2002, is a self-report questionnaire designed to achieve a comprehensive assessment of physical function and disability in community-dwelling older adults [2,3,4,5,6]. The disability component assesses two dimensions, frequency and limitations, responded to successively, allowing older persons to respond differently to questions of what they do in daily life versus what they are capable of doing [7]

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