Actively Recruiting
Validity and Reliability of the Arabic Version of De Morton Mobility Index After Abdominal Surgeries
Led by Cairo University · Updated on 2025-01-28
103
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
21 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
PURPOSE: To determine validity and reliability of translated Arabic version of the De Morton Mobility index for mobility assessment in patients after abdominal surgeries. BACKGROUND: Major abdominal surgery has a high morbidity and Mortality rate, and the risk of surgical complications is higher than for equivalent elective operations. those receiving emergency laparotomy are in a condition of physiological derangement driven by inflammation that has already occurred prior to surgery, in contrast to those undergoing elective abdominal operations. early mobility and exercise play an important role in postoperative treatment following abdominal surgery and are related with reduced postoperative fitness loss and fewer postoperative complications in individuals undergoing elective surgery. reduced mobility is a primary factor of lower quality of life and decreased social participation. reduced mobility is particularly common in older hospitalized patients, and it leads to an increased risk of falls, longer hospitalizations, more severe impairment and morbidity, and higher mortality rates. To manage elderly patients' mobility function, a reliable and valid mobility assessment tool is required. Performance-based examinations are commonly used to measure the mobility of elderly individuals. The De Morton Mobility Index (DEMMI) was established and validated exclusively for older patients hospitalized in the ward. The DEMMI provides clinicians and researchers with a valid interval-level method for accurately measuring and monitoring mobility levels of acute medical patients. It has been validated also in sub acute hospital and community settings. A DEMMI score of \<40 indicates an independent risk of serious postoperative complications. A low DEMMI score suggested impaired mobilization, and prior research of patients following abdominal surgery discovered that delayed mobilization was related with postoperative pulmonary complications. HYPOTHESES: It will be hypothesized that: Arabic version of the De Morton Mobility Index may be valid and reliable in patients after abdominal surgeries. RESEARCH QUESTION: Is The Arabic version of the De Morton Mobility index valid and reliable for mobility assessment in patients after abdominal surgeries?
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Validity and Reliability of the Arabic Version of De Morton Mobility Index After Abdominal Surgeries
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Patients after abdominal surgeries.
- Patients aged between 40 and 60 years.
- Patients able to read and write in Arabic.
- Patients who can understand the scale items.
- Patients who will follow instructions during assessment.
You will not qualify if you...
- Patients with mental disabilities.
- Patients with communication, vision, or hearing disorders.
- Patients who are not cooperative.
- Patients contraindicated to mobilize for medical reasons.
- Patients isolated due to infection.
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
El-Mansoura international hospital
Al Mansurah, Egypt
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
B
Basant A younes
CONTACT
K
karim I saafan, professor
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Masking
N/A
Allocation
N/A
Model
N/A
Primary Purpose
N/A
Number of Arms
1
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