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- Johanne Filiatrault, Louise Demers, Manon Parisien, Agathe Lorthios-Guilledroit, Christine Kaegi, Isabelle Ménard, Mary-Grace Paniconi, and Caroline St-Laurent.
- School of Rehabilitation, Faculty of Medicine, Université de Montréal , Montreal, Quebec , Canada .
- Disabil Rehabil. 2014 Jan 1;36(21):1798-803.
PurposeTo develop a French Canadian version of the Falls Behavioral (FaB) Scale and examine its psychometric properties.MethodsThe FaB was adapted in French Canadian (FaB-FC) and validated according to standard guidelines for cross-cultural adaptation of questionnaires. The internal consistency and construct validity of the FaB-FC were studied among 64 community-dwelling adults aged 60 and over. The concurrent validity and test-retest reliability of the FaB-FC were respectively examined among subsamples including 31 bilingual and 33 unilingual participants.ResultsThe FaB-FC showed good concurrent validity with the original FaB (ICC2 = 0.94; 0.87-0.97), as well as good test-retest reliability (ICC2 = 0.94; 0.88-0.97). The FaB-FC also demonstrated high internal consistency (α = 0.91). Moreover, analyses showed significant associations of the FaB-FC scores with fear of falling and balance confidence scores, attesting to its construct validity.ConclusionThis study provides evidence that the FaB-FC has sound psychometric properties. Since falls are associated with multiple risk factors, including behavioral factors, the FaB-FC is undoubtedly a relevant assessment tool for clinicians and researchers working toward fall prevention among French-speaking community-dwelling seniors.Implications For RehabilitationFall-related behaviors should be addressed in the assessment of community-dwelling seniors' fall risks. Like the original FaB, the French Canadian version of the tool (FaB-FC) is valid and reliable for assessing fall-related behaviors. The FaB-FC is a relevant complementary assessment tool for identifying seniors at risk for falls. The FaB-FC could also be useful in guiding fall prevention interventions and measuring the impact of these interventions on seniors' behaviors.
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