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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Apr 1.
Published in final edited form as: J Geriatr Phys Ther. 2013 Apr-Jun;36(2):10.1519/JPT.0b013e31825f6777. doi: 10.1519/JPT.0b013e31825f6777

Table 2. Process of Falls Grading Scale Development and Validation.

Step Purpose Number Product
Phase 1: Qualitative Development
Literature review Data generation 29 articles; 3 standarized falls definitionsa
Candidate falls severity grades Data synthesis Hopkins Falls Grading Scale study investigators Draft Hopkins Falls Grading Scale and several variations (4-5 grades)
Illustration development Illustrative aid to the grading system Member of Arts as Applied to Medicine Department at the Johns Hopkins University Draft illustrated Hopkins Falls Grading Scale and several variations (4-5 grades)
Phase 2: Scale Validation
Semi-structured interviews Face and content validity Older individuals (n=4) and providers (n = 12) with diverse expertise in treating older patients at risk of falls Hopkins Falls Grading Scale (4 grades) with strong face and content validity
Phase 3: Reliability Assessment
Scoring of 30 sample falls shown in video-vignettes based on the Hopkins Falls Grading Scale Inter-rater reliability 46 participants: 16 healthcare professionals and 30 volunteers Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.998 (ICC of 0.995 for healthcare professionals and 0.996 for volunteers.)
a

Kellogg International Work Group on the Prevention of Falls (1987)14, FICSIT (1993)15, PROFANE (2005)16