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Journal Article

Citation

James L, Davies MA, Mian S, Seghezzo G, Williamson E, Kemp S, Arden NK, McElvenny D, Pearce N, Gallo V. Epidemiol. Health 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Korean Society of Epidemiology)

DOI

10.4178/epih.e2021086

PMID

34696571

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The BRAIN-Q is a tool aimed at maximising the accuracy, and minimising measurement error, for retrospectively assessing concussions. This paper reports agreement of the BRAIN-Q tool when compared to extant questionnaire questions, and reproducibility when compared with its telephonic version (tBRAIN-Q).

METHODS: The BRAIN-Q entails a 3-stage process: defining concussion, creating a visual timeline with life events, and establishing detailed characteristics for each reported concussion. It was designed to be administered in-person by trained personnel, and was used in the BRAIN Study. Its performance was compared with the MSK Study which previously collected a few questions in a broader self-administered questionnaire; and with the tBRAIN-Q Recall, its telephonic version.

RESULTS: 101 participants were included; of these, nine were re-assessed with the tBRAIN-Q. Compared to the BRAIN-Q, the agreement with the MSK-Q for rugby-related concussion was 86.7% (kappa 0.6). Rugby-related concussion with loss of consciousness showed lower agreement (82.0% (kappa 0.6)). The comparison between the BRAIN-Q and the tBRAIN-Q showed a good reproducibility.

CONCLUSION: The BRAIN-Q is a relatively easy tool to administer in face-to-face assessments, it showed an optimal reproducibility, it includes a well-established definition of concussion, and is used to collect detailed information on each concussion allowing for a number of subgroup analyses (e.g. by severity, by age, by context). The BRAIN-Q is easily adaptable to other sporting settings.


Language: en

Keywords

*Evaluation; *Questionnaire; *Self-reported exposure; *Sport-related concussion

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