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Research Articles

Test of Everyday Attention in patients with chronic stroke: Test–retest reliability and practice effects

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Pages 1148-1154 | Received 18 Mar 2012, Accepted 06 Feb 2013, Published online: 29 Jul 2013
 

Abstract

Objective: To examine the measurement properties of Test of Everyday Attention (TEA) in patients with chronic stroke including: test–retest reliability between parallel forms (i.e. forms AB, BC and CA), practice effect and critical values for detecting true change corrected for practice effect and measurement error.

Methods: Ninety patients with chronic stroke (months since onset >6) were randomly assigned to receive forms AB, BC or CA of the TEA in a counterbalanced order. A test–retest design was used with a 1-week interval.

Results: All TEA sub-tests had good-to-excellent test–retest reliability among the three parallel forms except the Telephone Search While Counting (ICC = 0.51–0.59). Small practice effects were observed for almost all sub-tests. The reliable change index corrected for practice effect (RCIp) was provided for each sub-test.

Conclusions: Most TEA sub-tests show promise as reliable measures of attention for repeated use with the parallel forms in patients with chronic stroke. Practice effects must be considered to interpret an individual change in clinical settings. Therefore, the value of RCIp provides a conservative estimate of a patient’s progress, representing the smallest change in the TEA score that could be interpreted as true change, corrected for practice effects and measurement error.

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