4.6 Article

The Brain Injury Screening Tool (BIST): Tool development, factor structure and validity

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PLOS ONE
卷 16, 期 2, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246512

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Currently, there is significant variability in health care pathways following mild traumatic brain injury, with clinicians lacking confidence in injury recognition and management. The Brain Injury Screening Tool (BIST) was developed by a clinical expert group to guide health care pathways and improve long-term prognosis. The tool shows high internal consistency, factor structure, and concurrent validity, suggesting its utility in clinical practice. Further research is needed to explore the tool's scoring criteria and responsiveness to changes in patients.
Currently health care pathways (the combination and order of services that a patient receives to manage their injury) following a mild traumatic brain injury vary considerably. Some clinicians lack confidence in injury recognition, management and knowing when to refer. A clinical expert group developed the Brain Injury Screening Tool (BIST) to provide guidance on health care pathways based on clinical indicators of poor recovery. The tool aims to facilitate access to specialist services (if required) to improve longer term prognosis. The tool was developed using a three-step process including: 1) domain mapping; 2) item development and 3) item testing and review. An online retrospective survey of 114 adults (>16 years) who had experienced a mild brain injury in the past 10 years was used to determine the initial psychometric properties of the 15-item symptom scale of the BIST. Participants were randomised to complete the BIST and one of two existing symptom scales; the Rivermead Post-concussion Symptom Questionnaire (RPQ) or the Sports Concussion Assessment Test (SCAT-5) symptom scale to determine concurrent validity. Participant responses to the BIST symptom scale items were used to determine scale reliability using Cronbach's alpha. A principal components analysis explored the underlying factor structure. Spearman's correlation coefficients determined concurrent validity with the RPQ and SCAT-5 symptom scales. The 15 items were found to require a reading age of 6-8 years old using readability statistics. High concurrent validity was shown against the RPQ (r = 0.91) and SCAT-5 (r = 0.90). The BIST total symptom scale (alpha = 0.94) and the three factors identified demonstrated excellent internal consistency: physical/emotional (alpha = 0.90), cognitive (alpha = 0.92) and vestibular-ocular (alpha = 0.80). This study provides evidence to support the utility, internal consistency, factor structure and concurrent validity of the BIST. Further research is warranted to determine the utility of the BIST scoring criteria and responsiveness to change in patients.

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