Abstract

BackgroundConcern about a child's flat foot posture is a common reason for frequent clinical consultations for an array of health care and medical professionals. The recently developed paediatric flatfoot clinical-care pathway (FFP) has provided an evidence based approach to diagnosis and management. The intra and inter-rater/measurer reliability of the FFP has been investigated in this study.MethodsFrom a study population of 140 children aged seven to 10 years, a sample with flat feet was identified by screening with the Foot posture index (FPI-6). Subjects who scored ≥ 6 on the FPI-6 for both feet became the study's flat foot sample. A same subject, repeated measure research design was used for this study which examined the reliability of the FFP in 31 children aged seven to 10 years, as rated by three examiners.ResultsApproximately half of the items of the FFP showed less-than-desirable inter-rater reliability, arbitrarily set at the conventional 0.7 level (intra-class correlations). Removal of the unreliable items has produced a shorter; more relevant instrument designated the paediatric flat foot proforma (p-FFP).ConclusionThe p-FFP is a reliable instrument for the assessment and resulting treatment actions for children with flat feet. Findings indicate that the simplified p-FFP is a reproducible instrument for the clinical assessment of flat foot in mid-childhood.

Highlights

  • Concern about a child's flat foot posture is a common reason for frequent clinical consultations for an array of health care and medical professionals

  • The foot posture histograms for the study population (N = 140) (Figure 2) showed normal distribution for both left and right FPI-6 total scores

  • A limitation of this study is that the overall reproducibility of the newly modified p-flatfoot clinical-care pathway (FFP) was not confirmed as part of this study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Concern about a child's flat foot posture is a common reason for frequent clinical consultations for an array of health care and medical professionals. The significance of "flat feet" continues to debated within the general community, medical and allied health fields, as it has for decades [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12]. Flat foot in childhood is a common diagnosis and well established clinical term, there is a lack of a reliable and reproducible tool for the assessment of this condition. As a postural morphology, have long been associated with pain and disability (eg an exclusion from military service in both World Wars) and are often a concern to parents from a preventative perspective of their children's health and mobility

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call