Development and content validation of the Wheelchair Use Confidence Scale: a mixed-methods study

Paula W Rushton, William C Miller, Ronald Lee Kirby, Janice J Eng, Joanne Yip, Paula W Rushton, William C Miller, Ronald Lee Kirby, Janice J Eng, Joanne Yip

Abstract

Background: Confidence in one's ability to perform a given task can be a stronger predictor of performance than skill itself. There are currently no measures to assess confidence with manual wheelchair use. The objective of this study was to develop and assess the content validity of the Wheelchair Use Confidence Scale (WheelCon-M).

Method: A two-phase mixed-methods design was used. Semi-structured interviews were conducted to generate items, followed by a Delphi survey for item selection. Persons who use a wheelchair, health care professionals, and researchers participated in both phases of the study.

Results: An 84-item WheelCon-M was developed based on the qualitative data. After the Delphi survey, a final 62-item WheelCon-M was composed of the following six areas (number of items per area): Negotiating the Physical Environment (33 items), Activities Performed using a Manual Wheelchair (11 items), Knowledge and Problem Solving (6 items), Advocacy (4 items), Managing Social Situations (5 items) and Managing Emotions (3 items).

Conclusion: This article reports the development and content validation of the WheelCon-M. As a scale to measure confidence with wheelchair use was not available prior to this work, clinicians now have a method of identifying individuals who have low confidence with wheelchair use.

Conflict of interest statement

Competing Interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
WheelCon-M item analysis process using the Delphi survey

Source: PubMed

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