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Journal Article

Citation

Perrot A, Castanier C, Maillot P, Zitari H. Arch. Gerontol. Geriatr. 2018; 78: 233-239.

Affiliation

hôpital de jour gérontologique de Richaud, Versailles, France. Electronic address: zitahaifa@yahoo.fr.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.archger.2018.07.001

PMID

30025268

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Among the tools assessing fall related self-efficacy, the Modified-Falls Efficacy Scale (M-FES) seems to be a comprehensive and sensitive scale. However, no validated French version exists to this day.

OBJECTIVE: This study aims to translate the M-FES and validate this French translation (M-FES Fr).

METHOD: The validation steps used to translate and validate the M-FES Fr were i) forward - backward translation, ii) examination of the internal structure and reliability, iii) evaluation of the convergent validity. In this study, 310 French-speaking older adults (56 geriatric patients and 254 community-dwelling older adults) completed the M-FES Fr. Among the community-dwelling older adults, 67 fallers and 70 non-fallers were also asked to complete questionnaires related to variables such as health, fear of falling, and physical activity levels.

RESULTS: A two-factor solution (indoor vs outdoor activities) was suggested, which accounted for 68.1% of the total variance. Reliability estimates for both factors were good (Cronbach α > 0.94, ICC > .93). Significant differences between geriatric patients and community-dwelling older adults and between fallers and non-fallers were highlighted. Furthermore, the M-FES Fr scores were significantly linked to various risk factors for falling.

CONCLUSION: The M-FES Fr has psychometric properties which are similar to those found in the original version, including reliability and validity. This questionnaire will enable French-speaking researchers and health professionals to work with the same concepts as those used in other languages. Notably, the M-FES Fr could be used in the development and evaluation of intervention strategies in the prevention of falls.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Accidental falls; Aged; Fall-related self-efficacy; Fear of falling; French validation; M-FES

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