Nicholas Tripodi , Thomas Dagiandis , Ali Hameed , Liam Heilberg , Erick Olbinski , Cameron Reid , Alexander White , Patrick McLaughlin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Clinical running analysis is commonly employed in the screening of running related injuries. Currently, there remains little research exploring the use of clinical running analysis within the osteopathic profession. Hence, the aim of this pilot study is to investigate the inter-rater reliability of sagittal plane visual gait observation amongst osteopathic practitioners.
Methods
Fourteen osteopaths were recruited through an online platform. Each participant completed five, 11-item gait analysis forms, with each form corresponding to a different running gait video recorded in the sagittal plane. Krippendorff's alpha (Kα) was calculated to determine the inter-rater reliability between all participants, and between groups based on years of clinical experience.
Results
Very low inter-rater reliability was found between all participants (Kα<0.67) across all questions. Strong reliability was found for two questions answered by the 5–10 years’ experience group (Kα<0.8155) with regard to foot strike in the runners.
Discussion
The poor inter-rater reliability found in this pilot study, is in disagreement with previous research that has identified high inter-rater reliability with practitioners of varied clinical experience on a similar gait analysis task. These discrepancies may be explained by a range of methodological differences and limitations, chiefly the sample size and the objective nature of the kinematic observation tasks.
Conclusion
The results of this pilot study indicate there is very low reliability between this group of clinicians interpretation of running gait. Building on from this, future research should investigate clinician inter-rater reliability using more objective gait analysis measures.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Osteopathic Medicine is a peer-reviewed journal that provides for the publication of high quality research articles and review papers that are as broad as the many disciplines that influence and underpin the principles and practice of osteopathic medicine. Particular emphasis is given to basic science research, clinical epidemiology and health social science in relation to osteopathy and neuromusculoskeletal medicine.
The Editorial Board encourages submission of articles based on both quantitative and qualitative research designs. The Editorial Board also aims to provide a forum for discourse and debate on any aspect of osteopathy and neuromusculoskeletal medicine with the aim of critically evaluating existing practices in regard to the diagnosis, treatment and management of patients with neuromusculoskeletal disorders and somatic dysfunction. All manuscripts submitted to the IJOM are subject to a blinded review process. The categories currently available for publication include reports of original research, review papers, commentaries and articles related to clinical practice, including case reports. Further details can be found in the IJOM Instructions for Authors. Manuscripts are accepted for publication with the understanding that no substantial part has been, or will be published elsewhere.