The conclusion after this should have been that subjective measurements are almost worthless and an objective measurement protocol needs to be defined. But what the hell do I know.
http://www.hubmed.org/display.cgi?uids=22577062
Background Goniometric measurements of hemiplegic arm joints must be
reliable to draw proper clinical and scientific conclusions. Previous
reliability studies were cross-sectional and based on small samples.
Knowledge about the contributions of sources of variation to these
measurement results is lacking. Objective The aims of this study were to
determine the interobserver reliability of measurements of passive
range of motion (PROM) over time, explore sources of variation
associated with these measurement results, and generate smallest
detectable differences for clinical decision making. Design This
investigation was a measurement-focused study with a longitudinal
design, nested within a 2-arm randomized controlled trial./b> Two
trained physical therapists assessed 7 arm movements at baseline and
after 4, 8, and 20 weeks in 48 people with subacute stroke using a
standardized protocol. One physical therapist performed the passive
movement, and the other read the hydrogoniometer. The therapists then
switched roles. The relative contributions of several sources of
variation to error variance were explored with analysis of
variance./b> Interobserver reliability coefficients ranged from .89
to .97. The PROM measurements were influenced by error variance ranging
from 31% to 50%. The participant � time interaction made the largest
contribution to error variance, ranging from 59% to 81%. Smallest
detectable differences were 6 to 22 degrees and were largest for
shoulder movements. Limitations Verification of shoulder pain and
hypertonia as sources of error variance led to a substantial number of
unstable variance components, necessitating a simpler analysis./b>
The assessment of PROM with a standardized protocol, a hydrogoniometer,
and 2 trained physical therapists yielded high interobserver reliability
indexes for all arm movements. Error variance made a large contribution
to the variation in measurement results. The resulting smallest
detectable differences can be used to interpret future hemiplegic arm
PROM measurements with more confidence.
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