Agreement between original and Rasch-approved neck disability index.

2020 
Given the high prevalence of neck pain, the neck disability index (NDI) has been used to evaluate patient status and treatment outcomes. Modified versions were proposed as solutions to measurement deficits in the NDI. However, the original 10-item NDI was scored out of 50 and is still the most frequently administered version. Examining the extent of agreement between traditional and Rasch-based versions using Bland-Altman (BA ±1.96 times the standard deviation). Two Rasch approved alternative versions (8 vs 5 items) were identified from 303 screened publications. We analyzed data from 201 (43 males and 158 females) patients attending community clinics for neck pain. We found that the mean difference was approximately 10% of the total score between the 10-item and 5-item (− 4.6 points), whereas the 10-item versus 8-item and 8-item versus 5-item had smaller mean differences (− 2.3 points). The B&A plots displayed wider 95% LoA for the agreement between 10-item and 8-item (LoA: − 12.0, 7.4) and 5-item (LoA: − 14.9, 5.8) compared with the LoA for the 8-item and 5-item (LoA: − 7.8, 3.3). Two Rasch-based NDI solutions (8 vs 5 items) which differ in number of items and conceptual construction are available to provide interval level scoring. They both provide scores that are substantially different from the ordinal NDI, which does not provide interval level scoring. Smaller differences between the two Rasch solutions exist and may relate to the items included. Due to the size and unpredictable nature of the bias between measures, they should not be used interchangeably.
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