4.3 Article

Exploring the Use of Washington Group Questions to Identify People with Clinical Impairments Who Need Services including Assistive Products: Results from Five Population-Based Surveys

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074304

Keywords

surveys; impairment; functioning; screening; rehabilitation; assistive products; Cameroon; Chile; India; The Gambia; Turkey

Funding

  1. UK Aid through the AT2030 programme [300815]
  2. India and Cameroon: CBM Germany (LSHTM) [ITCRRH71]
  3. Chile: Chile Ministry of Health
  4. Gambia: The Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust
  5. Turkey: United States Department of State to Relief International

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This study analyzes the use of the self-reported Washington Group question sets as a first stage screening for identifying individuals with clinical impairments and referral needs. The findings suggest that the WG questions can be a viable option for identifying people with impairments and referral needs, although with moderate sensitivity and specificity.
This study analyses the use of the self-reported Washington Group (WG) question sets as a first stage screening to identify people with clinical impairments, service and assistive product (AP) referral needs using different cut-off levels in four functional domains (vision, hearing, mobility and cognition). Secondary data analysis was undertaken using population-based survey data from five countries, including one national survey (The Gambia) and four regional/district surveys (Cameroon, Chile, India and Turkey). In total 19,951 participants were sampled (range 538-9188 in individual studies). The WG question sets on functioning were completed for all participants alongside clinical impairment assessments/questionnaires. Using the WG some/worse difficulty cut-off identified people with mild/worse impairments with variable sensitivity (44-79%) and specificity (73-92%) in three of the domains. At least 64% and 60% of people with mild/worse impairments who required referral for surgical/medical and rehabilitation/AP services, respectively, self-reported some/worse difficulty, and much fewer reported a lot/worse difficulty. For moderate/worse impairment, both screening cut-offs improved identification of service/AP need, but a smaller proportion of people with need were identified. In conclusion, WG questions could be used as a first-stage screening option to identify people with impairment and referral needs, but only with moderate sensitivity and specificity.

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