Traumatic Brain Injury and Cerebral Vascular Accident: Application of Rasch Analysis to Examine Differences in Disability and Outcome in Post-Hospital Rehabilitation
The purpose of this study was to demonstrate an application of Rasch
analysis to identify differences in disability profiles resulting from
traumatic brain injury (TBI) and cerebral vascular accident (CVA) and to
examine outcome differences between the two groups following post-hospital
residential rehabilitation. Participant data were collected from 32 facilities in 16 states. From 2990 neurologically
impaired individuals with consecutive admissions from 2011 through 2017, 874
met inclusion criteria: TBI (n=687) or
CVA (n=187), 18 years or older, minimum length of stay of one month, and maximum
chronicity of 1 year. Participants were evaluated at admission and discharge on
the Mayo Portland Adaptability Inventory-Version
4 (MPAI-4). Rasch analysis was performed to establish item reliability,
construct validity and item difficulty. A Repeated Measures Multivariate
Analysis of Covariance (RM MANCOVA) determined group differences and
improvement from admission and discharge. Rasch Analysis demonstrated satisfactory
construct validity and internal consistency (Person reliability > 0.90,
Item reliability > 0.98 for admission and discharge MPAI-4s). Both groups showed significant
improvement on the MPAI-4 (p< 0.0005).
The TBI group was more impaired on the adjustment scale at both admission and
discharge (p< 0.001). Rasch analysis identified two distinct impairment patterns. CVA
participants exhibited deficits characteristic of focal impairment while the
TBI group presented with deficits reflective of diffuse impairment.
Rehabilitation was shown to be beneficial in reducing disability following
neurologic injury in both groups. Importantly,
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