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Development of a Measure to Inform Return-to-Duty Decision Making After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury.
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- Author(s): Radomski, Mary Vining; Weightman, Margaret M.; Davidson, Leslie Freeman; Finkelstein, Marsha; Goldman, Sarah; McCulloch, Karen; Roy, Tanja C.; Scherer, Matthew; Stern, Erica B.
- Source:
Military Medicine. Mar2013, Vol. 178 Issue 3, p246-253. 8p.
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- Abstract:
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), a principal injury of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, can result in significant morbidity. To make accurate return-to-duty decisions for soldiers with mTBI, military medical personnel require sensitive, objective, and duty-relevant data to characterize subtle cognitive and sensorimotor injury sequelae. A military-civilian research team reviewed existing literature and obtained input from stakeholders, end users, and experts to specify the concept and develop a preliminary assessment protocol to address this need. Results of the literature review suggested the potential utility of a test based on dual-task and multitask assessment methods. Thirty-three individuals representing a variety of military and civilian stakeholders/experts participated in interviews. Interview data suggested that reliability/validity, clinical feasibility, usability across treatment facilities, military face validity, and capacity to challenge mission-critical mTBI vulnerabilities were important to ultimate adoption. The research team developed the Assessment of Military Multitasking Performance, a tool composed of eight dual and multitasking test- tasks. A concept test session with 10 subjects indicated preliminary face validity and informed modifications to scoring and design. Further validation is needed. The Assessment of Military Multitasking Performance may fill a gap identified by stakeholders for complex cognitive/motor testing to assist return-to-duty decisions for service members with mTBI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Abstract:
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