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Resumen de Determination of the minimal important change in the life‐space assessment

Richard E. Kennedy, Marzouq Almutairi, Courtney P. Williams, Patricia Sawyer, Richard M. Allman, Cynthia J. Brown

  • Background/Objectives The University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Life‐Space Assessment (LSA) is a widely used measure of community mobility. To assist clinicians and researchers with assessing the significance of changes in scores, we determined the minimal important change associated with a change in health status.

    Setting Homes of community‐dwelling older adults.

    Participants A total of 419 African American and non‐Hispanic white adults 75 years and older participating in the UAB Study of Aging II, a longitudinal epidemiological study across the state of Alabama.

    Intervention None.

    Measurements Linear mixed models were used to compare change in LSA scores over 1‐month intervals (N = 9712) between participants reporting improvement, no change, or decline in activities of daily living walking scores, accounting for the correlation among scores for the same participant over time.

    Results A decline in walking status was associated with a mean decrease in LSA scores of 2.93 points (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.69‐4.17 points), indicating lower mobility. An improvement in walking status was associated with a mean increase in LSA scores of 2.51 points (95% CI = 1.26‐3.77 points), indicating higher mobility.

    Conclusion A change in LSA scores of five or more is clinically important, exceeding the 95% CI for the change in LSA associated with change in walking status. Changes exceeding this threshold should prompt further investigation by providers with a goal of preserving mobility.


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