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Development and Validation of a Bilingual Stroke Preparedness Assessment Instrument

Skolarus, Lesli E.
Mazor, Kathleen M.
Sanchez, Brisa N.
Dome, Mackenzie
Biller, Jose
Morgenstern, Lewis B.
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Journal Article
Publication Date
2017-04-01
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Stroke preparedness interventions are limited by the lack of psychometrically sound intermediate end points. We sought to develop and assess the reliability and validity of the video-Stroke Action Test (video-STAT) an English and a Spanish video-based test to assess people's ability to recognize and react to stroke signs.

METHODS: Video-STAT development and testing was divided into 4 phases: (1) video development and community-generated response options, (2) pilot testing in community health centers, (3) administration in a national sample, bilingual sample, and neurologist sample, and (4) administration before and after a stroke preparedness intervention.

RESULTS: The final version of the video-STAT included 8 videos: 4 acute stroke/emergency, 2 prior stroke/nonemergency, 1 nonstroke/emergency, and 1 nonstroke/nonemergency. Acute stroke recognition and action response were queried after each vignette. Video-STAT scoring was based on the acute stroke vignettes only (score range 0-12 best). The national sample consisted of 598 participants, 438 who took the video-STAT in English and 160 who took the video-STAT in Spanish. There was adequate internal consistency (Cronbach alpha=0.72). The average video-STAT score was 5.6 (SD=3.6), whereas the average neurologist score was 11.4 (SD=1.3). There was no difference in video-STAT scores between the 116 bilingual video-STAT participants who took the video-STAT in English or Spanish. Compared with baseline scores, the video-STAT scores increased after a stroke preparedness intervention (6.2 versus 8.9, P < 0.01) among a sample of 101 black adults and youth.

CONCLUSIONS: The video-STAT yields reliable scores that seem to be valid measures of stroke preparedness.

Source

Stroke. 2017 Apr;48(4):1020-1025. doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.116.015107. Epub 2017 Mar 1. Link to article on publisher's site

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DOI
10.1161/STROKEAHA.116.015107
PubMed ID
28250199
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