International journal of rehabilitation research. Internationale Zeitschrift für Rehabilitationsforschung. Revue internationale de recherches de réadaptation
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Translating, culturally adapting and validating the Italian version of the Pain Stages of Change Questionnaire (PSOCQ-I) to allow its use with Italian-speaking patients with low back pain. The PSOCQ-I was developed by forward-backward translation, a final review by an expert committee and a test of the prefinal version to establish its correspondence with the original English version. Psychometric testing included confirmatory factor analysis, reliability by internal consistency (Cronbach's α) and test-retest reliability (intraclass coefficient correlation), and construct validity by comparing PSOCQ-I with the Pain Catastrophising Scale (PCS), the Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia (TSK), the Roland Morris Disability Scale (RMDQ), a pain Numerical Rating Scale (NRS), and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (Pearson's correlation). ⋯ Low correlations were found between the PSOCQ-I subscales and anxiety (r=-0.132; 0.150) and depression (r=-0.113; 0.186). The PSOCQ was translated successfully into Italian, and proved to have a good factorial structure and psychometric properties that replicated the results of other versions. Its use is recommended for research purposes.
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We carried out a prospective study to determine whether stroke patients' functional status or health-related quality of life would predict whether they lived at home 2.5 years after discharge from neurological inpatient rehabilitation. We carried out a single-center prospective cohort study. The outcome 'home care' versus 'death' or 'institutionalization' (nursing home admission) was evaluated 30 months after discharge. ⋯ In total, 30 months after discharge, 75% of the stroke survivors were still living at home. Multivariate analysis showed that patients continued to live at home significantly more frequently when they had fewer mortality-relevant comorbidities (P=0.001), a higher BMI (P=0.040), a higher increase in functional independence during inpatient rehabilitation (P=0.017), and above all, a better health-related quality of life, measured using the EQ-5D (P<0.001), at discharge. Stroke survivors' health-related quality of life measured with the EQ-5D and the change in functional status during multimodal neurological rehabilitation appear to be the strongest clinically relevant long-term predictors of staying at home.