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Lundi : 8h-18h30
Mardi : 8h-17h30
Mercredi 9h-16h30
Jeudi : 8h30-18h30
Vendredi : 8h30-12h30 et 13h-14h30
Votre centre de documentation sera exceptionnellement fermé de 12h30 à 13h ce lundi 18 novembre.
Egalement, il sera fermé de 12h30 à 13h30 ce mercredi 20 novembre.
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Auteur Leeanne M. Carey |
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Assessing body sensations in children: Intra-rater reliability of assessment and effects of age / Susan Taylor in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy, Vol. 82 Issue 3 (Mars 2019)
[article]
Titre : Assessing body sensations in children: Intra-rater reliability of assessment and effects of age Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Susan Taylor ; Belinda McLean ; Torbjorn Falkmer ; Leeanne M. Carey ; Sonya Girdler ; Catherine Elliott ; Eve Blair Année de publication : 2019 Article en page(s) : p. 179-185 Note générale : doi.org/10.1177/0308022618786933 Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Adolescent child outcome assessment proprioception stereognosis touch occupational therapy Résumé : Introduction
This article examines the effect of age and gender on somatosensory capacity for children and adolescents, and provides preliminary normative data and reliability for the SenScreen© Kids, a new standardised measure of touch, wrist position sense and haptic object recognition.
Method
A cross-sectional study of 88 typically developing children aged 6–15 years (mean 10.3 years; SD 2.6 years) was used to determine the developmental effects of age and gender on somatosensory capacity. Intra-rater reliability was assessed in 22 of the 88 participants at two time points (mean 8.8 years; SD 2.6 years).
Results
Statistically significant differences were observed between age groups for tactile discrimination, wrist position sense and haptic object recognition, but not for touch registration for which all except one participant achieved a maximum score. There was no effect of gender. Three of four SenScreen Kids subtests demonstrated good intra-rater agreement between time points.
Conclusions
Somatosensory capacity increased with age for typically developing children aged 6–15 years. Three subtests of the SenScreen Kids demonstrated good intra-rater reliability with typically developing children. Further investigation of reliability is required, and all subtests require psychometric testing with clinical populations.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84437
in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 82 Issue 3 (Mars 2019) . - p. 179-185[article] Assessing body sensations in children: Intra-rater reliability of assessment and effects of age [texte imprimé] / Susan Taylor ; Belinda McLean ; Torbjorn Falkmer ; Leeanne M. Carey ; Sonya Girdler ; Catherine Elliott ; Eve Blair . - 2019 . - p. 179-185.
doi.org/10.1177/0308022618786933
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in The British Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 82 Issue 3 (Mars 2019) . - p. 179-185
Mots-clés : Adolescent child outcome assessment proprioception stereognosis touch occupational therapy Résumé : Introduction
This article examines the effect of age and gender on somatosensory capacity for children and adolescents, and provides preliminary normative data and reliability for the SenScreen© Kids, a new standardised measure of touch, wrist position sense and haptic object recognition.
Method
A cross-sectional study of 88 typically developing children aged 6–15 years (mean 10.3 years; SD 2.6 years) was used to determine the developmental effects of age and gender on somatosensory capacity. Intra-rater reliability was assessed in 22 of the 88 participants at two time points (mean 8.8 years; SD 2.6 years).
Results
Statistically significant differences were observed between age groups for tactile discrimination, wrist position sense and haptic object recognition, but not for touch registration for which all except one participant achieved a maximum score. There was no effect of gender. Three of four SenScreen Kids subtests demonstrated good intra-rater agreement between time points.
Conclusions
Somatosensory capacity increased with age for typically developing children aged 6–15 years. Three subtests of the SenScreen Kids demonstrated good intra-rater reliability with typically developing children. Further investigation of reliability is required, and all subtests require psychometric testing with clinical populations.Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=84437 Exemplaires (1)
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Exclu du prêtChange in Functional Arm Use Is Associated With Somatosensory Skills After Sensory Retraining Poststroke. / Megan Turville in American Journal of Occupational Therapy, Vol. 71/3 (2017)
[article]
Titre : Change in Functional Arm Use Is Associated With Somatosensory Skills After Sensory Retraining Poststroke. Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Megan Turville, Auteur ; Leeanne M. Carey, Auteur ; Thomas A. Matyas, Auteur Année de publication : 2017 Article en page(s) : pp.1-9 Langues : Américain (ame) Mots-clés : Réadaptation après un accident vasculaire cérébral Os du membre supérieur Troubles de la perception Réadaptation ergothérapie Résumé : OBJECTIVE. We investigated changes in functional arm use after retraining for stroke-related somatosensory loss and identified whether such changes are associated with somatosensory discrimination skills. METHOD. Data were pooled (N = 80) from two randomized controlled trials of somatosensory retraining. We used the Motor Activity Log to measure perceived amount of arm use in daily activities and the Action Research Arm Test to measure performance capacity. Somatosensory discrimination skills were measured using standardized modality-specific measures. RESULTS. Participants' arm use improved after somatosensory retraining (z = -6.80, p < .01). Change in arm use was weakly associated with somatosensation (tactile, β = 0.31, p < .01; proprioception, β = -0.17, p > .05; object recognition, β = 0.13, p < .05). CONCLUSION. Change in daily arm use was related to a small amount of variance in somatosensory outcomes. Stroke survivors' functional arm use can increase after somatosensory retraining, with change varying among survivors. Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=49284
in American Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 71/3 (2017) . - pp.1-9[article] Change in Functional Arm Use Is Associated With Somatosensory Skills After Sensory Retraining Poststroke. [texte imprimé] / Megan Turville, Auteur ; Leeanne M. Carey, Auteur ; Thomas A. Matyas, Auteur . - 2017 . - pp.1-9.
Langues : Américain (ame)
in American Journal of Occupational Therapy > Vol. 71/3 (2017) . - pp.1-9
Mots-clés : Réadaptation après un accident vasculaire cérébral Os du membre supérieur Troubles de la perception Réadaptation ergothérapie Résumé : OBJECTIVE. We investigated changes in functional arm use after retraining for stroke-related somatosensory loss and identified whether such changes are associated with somatosensory discrimination skills. METHOD. Data were pooled (N = 80) from two randomized controlled trials of somatosensory retraining. We used the Motor Activity Log to measure perceived amount of arm use in daily activities and the Action Research Arm Test to measure performance capacity. Somatosensory discrimination skills were measured using standardized modality-specific measures. RESULTS. Participants' arm use improved after somatosensory retraining (z = -6.80, p < .01). Change in arm use was weakly associated with somatosensation (tactile, β = 0.31, p < .01; proprioception, β = -0.17, p > .05; object recognition, β = 0.13, p < .05). CONCLUSION. Change in daily arm use was related to a small amount of variance in somatosensory outcomes. Stroke survivors' functional arm use can increase after somatosensory retraining, with change varying among survivors. Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=49284 Exemplaires (1)
Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité Revue Revue Centre de Documentation HELHa Campus Montignies Armoires à volets Document exclu du prêt - à consulter sur place
Exclu du prêt