Introduction

Assessments are an essential part of rehabilitation management at a micro-level. However, they are also embedded in a wider framework that comprises quality management programs at the meso-level and national reporting at the macro-level [1,2,3]. National reporting requires harmonized data collection according to a widely accepted framework that includes, for example, internationally accepted classifications such as the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) or the International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) [4,5,6]. These classifications can be considered to make up a unifying model that determines “what to measure” [6,7,8].

The living conditions and functional capacity of a person affected by a spinal cord injury (SCI) depend on the level of body structure and function, activity, and participation, as well as personal and contextual factors [9]. In order to examine these components in a comparable and defined way, certain assessments are used as part of clinical management [10]. In the first step of the Rehab-Cycle® [11], the needs to be addressed are assessed by describing specific parts of a person’s functioning, and the goal-setting process is shaped [12]. Repeating these assessments after the administration of an intervention helps identify the changes and outcomes of rehabilitative interventions [1, 11, 13, 14]. Appropriate assessment standards can indicate the effectiveness of therapeutic interventions and, therefore, they can be used to identify the best practice models and to determine the quality of rehabilitation benchmarks [10, 15].

The standardization of assessments used as outcome measures allows for national and international reporting [15, 16] as well as comparison between different rehabilitation programs [17]. For clinical management, assessments should be specific and meaningful [1, 10, 12] and tested for their psychometric quality [3, 15]. A number of initiatives have been undertaken to integrate different disease characteristics into relevant clinical outcome measures [3, 7, 18], such as the development of the International SCI Data Set (ISCoS) [19]. Further, cohort studies such as the SwiSCI study [20, 21] were set up to provide practitioners with tools that allow the merging of clinical management and scientific evaluation. Additionally, first rehabilitation toolkits based on the consensus of various organizations have now been published to harmonize data collection for SCI outcome measures at a national and worldwide level [3]. These toolkits include relevant topics related to the data to be recorded for each patient and the assessments that have to be performed [3].

Despite these developments and international recommendations, there are no standard assessments that are routinely used in clinical practice. One further step for developing a clinically and scientifically accepted standard toolkit is to examine the use of assessments in the natural work environment. Therefore, the aim of this study was to get an overview of the currently used assessment instruments at the Swiss Paraplegic Centre (SPC) during the first rehabilitation intervention in patients with newly acquired SCI. The following questions were addressed: which group of professionals administered which assessment instruments in clinical practice, and in whom (patient groups) and how often were the instruments administered at this specialized clinic. Furthermore, significant differences in the number of assessments per patient between patient groups were also examined.

Methods

Research design

Within the framework of a quality assurance project, a retrospective chart review was performed. The Ethics Commission Northwest and Central Switzerland approved of this study (EKNZ UBE-15/109) and all the institutional regulations were followed.

Patients and setting

The study included patients with a newly acquired traumatic or non-traumatic SCI or SCI comparable syndromes who were admitted for their first rehabilitation intervention to a specialized acute care and rehabilitation clinic for SCI between December 2013 and December 2014. Patients under the age of 18 years and those who did not provide their consent for the use of their data for retrospective data analyses were excluded.

The center has been a part of the SwiSCI pathway 3 study (Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Cohort Study) [22] since May 2013 and the EMSCI study (European Multicenter Study about Spinal Cord Injury 2016) [23] since August 2012, and conducts the specifically recommended assessments for patients participating in these studies. Furthermore, the National Association for Quality Development in Clinics (ANQ) mandates the selection of participation goals in every patient and the monthly reporting of the Spinal Cord Independence Measurement III (SCIM III) [24]. The monthly SCIM III is therefore part of an administered control system. In 2012, physiotherapists (PTs) and occupational therapists (OTs) developed recommendations for an assessment schedule that outlines the type of assessment and their timeframes for administration. All the selected assessments were psychometrically tested and recommended by international SCI societies. Additionally, other assessments can be initiated by the therapists or requested by physicians in cases where there are clinical indications for the same.

Data collection

First, the quality control department selected patients according to the ICD codes [25], if they met the inclusion criteria. The generated list of variables was as follows: sex, age at admission, length of stay, cause of SCI, and completeness of lesion. Next, a list of assessments to be screened was created, based on SwiSCI, EMSCI, and a clinic intern recommendation list (see section Patients and setting) (Table 1: Assessment Instruments). Furthermore, specialists (nurses, therapists, and physicians) were consulted to add relevant assessments and examinations. Because many nurse assessments were neither validated nor standardized, this routinely performed structured documentation was not listed.

Table 1 Abbreviation and full name of all screened assessments during first rehabilitation of patients with spinal cord injury, responsible profession, and places of documentation

The patient records consist of paper and electronic documentations. Four electronic databases were used in parallel with different purposes: Medfolio (Nexus, Switzerland), WicareDoc, 4.2.0 (Wigasoft, Switzerland), Patient Management Cockpit, 1.5.400.100 (SPARE GmbH, Switzerland), and PACS, 5.0.95154 (Phönix-PACS GmbH, Germany). Assessments were either documented in electronic databases or manually collected in different paper documents.

For the analysis, based on the dataset derived from the second part of the data collection the number of assessments per patient was determined, before it was merged with the first dataset. Ultimately, the data were reversibly pseudonymized. The data are stored in the clinical trial unit of the institute and can be made available on request (clinical.trial.unit@paraplegie.ch).

Statistical analysis

The patient characteristics (sex, age at admission, length of stay, nature of SCI, completeness of lesion, and the American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) Impairment Scale (AIS) category at admission and discharge) are presented as numbers and percentages. The χ 2 test was carried out to evaluate differences between patient groups. The average, minimum, and maximum number of administrations per person for all instruments was calculated according to the level of injury (paraplegia/tetraplegia) and further stratified according to the completeness of the lesion (complete/incomplete). Assessments suitable for all patients were then compared in terms of the average number of administrations per person according to the level of injury and the level of completeness of the lesion. Monthly categories for assessments were built based on 30-day periods rather than calendar months. The number of administrations per person for every assessment instrument was 0, 1, 2, or ≥ 3. A p value of ≤ 0.05 was considered to indicate statistical significance, and calculations were performed using Stata (version 13.1).

Results

Demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients

A total of 119 patients (83 males: 43 with paraplegia, 65 with traumatic SCI, and 37 with complete lesions) with a mean age of 54 years were included (Table 2). At admission, 37 patients had AIS A; 28, AIS B; 28, AIS C, and 26, AIS D (Table 2). Statistically significant differences were found between the participants with paraplegia and tetraplegia with regard to the length of stay and cause of SCI. More traumatic causes of SCI were observed in tetraplegic patients, whereas more non-traumatic causes were noticed in patients with paraplegia (Table 2). Mean duration from the first diagnosis of SCI to admission at the SPC was 22.79 days (min = 0 days, max = 192 days), with 76% of the patients admitted within 1 month, 17% admitted between 1 and 2 months after onset of SCI, 5% between 2 and 3 months, and 3% admitted after more than 3 months. The percentage of patients who stayed for more than 10 months was higher in the tetraplegic than in the paraplegic group (Table 2).

Table 2 Patient characteristics of patients with spinal cord injury (admission December 2013–December 2014)

Administration of assessment instruments

The assessment instruments were administered by physicians, neuropsychologists, nurses, PTs, and OTs. Psychologists, nutritional consultants, and speech therapists did not administer standardized assessment instruments at the time.

Of the 54 instruments, 41 were administered (Table 1), and the unused instruments are shown in Table 1. Physicians and neuropsychologists used Medfolio and PACS, whereas PTs, OTs, and nurses used WicareDoc. The only interdisciplinary instrument used was the SCIM III, which was administered by nurses, OTs, and PTs and documented in Medfolio.

Across all patients, SCIM III was the most commonly administered instrument (mean number of assessments per patient = 7.7) (Table 3). The other frequently used instruments were skin assessment (mean = 3.6) by nurses, MMT (mean for the lower extremities (LE) = 3.2, mean for the upper extremities (UE) = 2.5) by PTs and OTs, radiography of the spine (mean = 2.3) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the spine (mean = 1.2) by physicians, and ROM (mean for LE = 2.1, mean for UE = 1.5, mean for the wrist and finger = 1.1) by PTs. The AIS was on average used 1.9 times by physicians. The 10 most infrequently used instruments are shown in Table 3. With the exception of Phrenicus-ENG and Functional State of Sensibility in upper extremity, all the tetraplegia-specific instruments were also used in some patients with paraplegia (Table 3).

Table 3 Average, minimum, and maximum administration of assessments in patients with SCI during first rehabilitation, n = 119

The number of AIS measurements was higher in patients with paraplegia than in those with tetraplegia, whereas osteoporosis diagnostics was more frequent in those with tetraplegia (Table 4). The frequency of the other assessments did not significantly differ between paraplegic and tetraplegic patients. However, urodynamics studies, spine radiography, computed tomography (CT) of the spine, the Ashworth Scale (AS), the Adductor Tone Rating Scale (ATRS), and skin assessments were more frequently performed in patients with complete lesions than in patients with incomplete lesions (Table 4). In contrast, MMT of the LE, ROM of the LE, and the 6-Minute Walk Test (6MWT) were administered more frequently in patients with incomplete lesions (Table 4). The frequency of the other assessments did not significantly differ between patients with complete lesions and those with incomplete lesions.

Table 4 Average of assessments per patient during first rehabilitation, by level of injury (paraplegia vs. petraplegia) and complete vs. incomplete lesion

Within the complete and incomplete lesion groups the frequency of osteoporosis diagnostics, Time Up and Go (TUG), 6MWT, ATRS, Penn Spasm Frequency Scale (PSFS), Berg Balance Scale (BBS), and State of Housekeeping differed between tetraplegic and paraplegic patients (supplementary file). Among the patients with incomplete lesions, the Walking Index for Spinal Cord Injury (WISCI) was used twice as often in paraplegics than in tetraplegics (p = 0.05) (supplementary file).

Discussion

A total of 41 different assessments were administered during the first rehabilitation intervention after a newly acquired SCI. On average, 10 assessments were administered more than once per patient and 6 were administered more than twice. The most frequently used assessments were SCIM III, MMT LE, skin assessment, spine radiography, MMT of UE, ROM (LE, UE, wrist, and finger), AIS, MRI of the spine, and urodynamics examination.

The highest variation in the number of assessments per patient was observed between patients with complete and incomplete lesions, and the least was observed between patients with paraplegia and tetraplegia.

Frequency of administration of the assessments

In order to measure the changes that occur during rehabilitation, assessments need to be performed at least twice, ideally at the beginning and at the end of an intervention [10, 11, 26]. In this study, only six assessments that were administered by four professionals satisfied this criterion, which are SCIM III, AIS, spinal radiography, MRI, ROM, and MMT, highly recommended by the ISCOS consensus conference [14]. Based on the national and international recommendations and actual practices, these assessments can be considered as valuable and established standards of outcome measurements for all SCI patient groups. The monthly frequency of use of SCIM III further indicates the importance of this assessment as part of clinical management strategies; moreover, it is accepted as an international standard [14, 27, 28] and is recommended by the National Quality Association of Switzerland [24]. To ensure that the repeated assessments are of high quality, integrated monitoring processes are needed. In the absence of any monitoring mechanism, and based on clinical decisions by individual practitioners, AIS and MMT were repeated more than twice on average, but they were not consistently used in every patient. The frequency and consistency of these assessments are not in keeping with those of standardized outcome measurements or with the national reporting standards [26]. Once a standard is in place, an explicit support or recall system and performance controls should be implemented [1] to increase the quality of the data collection. Further, to keep the clinical burden as low as possible, the assessments included in the standard assessment toolkit should be chosen wisely [1, 3].

Assessments used in the first rehabilitation after SCI

Physicians and therapists use assessments to measure clinical changes [1] and choose the assessments based on the expected outcomes and rehabilitation goals of patients. A relevant prerequisite for clinical confidence is that the psychometrical test considers the validity and reproducibility of selected assessments as described in the SCIRE project [15] and the Common Data Elements [19]. Characteristics of patients with paraplegia or tetraplegia, and characteristics of patients with complete or incomplete lesions differ substantially in each group [15, 29]. Accordingly, the assessments used are specific to each patient group: for example, GRASSP is used more often in tetraplegic patients; WISCI II and 6MWT are used more frequently in patients with walking abilities; and MMT is used more commonly in SCI patients with incomplete lesions. Therefore, a standardized assessment toolkit should be supplemented with specific assessments for each patient subgroup to measure clinically relevant changes, to reflect the differences in the functioning of patients, and to further increase the motivation of therapists, physicians, and patients [1]. In summary, the recommendations should include some assessments for patients with SCI in general and some for relevant functional subgroups or in response to specific clinical questions. In this way, the content of different assessment kits is part of the nationally and internationally accepted standards as well as allows health professionals to choose additional assessments to demonstrate specific and individual outcomes of rehabilitation. Moreover, the electronic medical records should use a format that can be adapted to each individual as well as standardized formats for mandatory data collection [4].

From the perspective of the ICF, the often-administered assessments cover structure, functioning, and activity. An example of structure assessment is the skin assessment, which is the second most commonly used assessment. The number of skin assessments underlines the clinical importance of skin changes, which often occur as complications during the first rehabilitation after SCI [30]. According to international recommendations, the AIS is considered as an indicator of neurological changes [14, 27], and clinically relevant assessments, such as MMT of UE/LE, ROM of UE/LE/wrist and finger, spinal radiography and spinal MRI, cover structure, and functioning. These assessments are also included in other countries recommendations such as Canada [3]. However, we found that certain nationally and internationally recommended assessments were not covered, such as assessments that evaluate pain and autonomic dysfunction [31, 32], and outcome measures for colon and rectal function, sexual function, depression, and quality of life [17, 18]. In addition, no psychometrically tested assessment instrument for participation was administered, but the general nationally accepted criteria for discharge or admission to an institute are documented and could be used for management and outcome evaluation. With regard to the ICF core set for SCI, assessments evaluating energy, emotion, pain, and employment are also missing [5, 26]. Therefore, to cover the recommended domains and in consideration of international reporting requirements, specific additional assessments should be implemented in clinical practice [15]. A sustainable assessment toolkit should be created based on daily practices and the recommendations of international specialists. After the administered assessments are described, the selection of additionally required assessments must be followed by their implementation and the engagement of stakeholders to achieve the assessment standards as described in the SCIRE guidelines [15]. Like guidelines, an assessment toolkit also needs regular updates to include the newest evidence from psychometrically tested assessments.

The main limitation of this study was that the information was collected manually, which means that some assessments could have been missed. A documenting system in a rehabilitation setting and a central overview of all administered assessments would be recommended. The unequal distribution of the 119 study participants in the respective groups was representative of the Swiss SCI population [33], but the sample size was too small for meaningful descriptive statistical analyses of some subgroups. Therefore, some of the significant group differences might be attributable to subgroup size and must be interpreted with caution.

Conclusion

With respect to the quality of rehabilitation management, the observed assessments could be useful for the development of a standardized assessment toolkit that includes all the required assessments for all patient groups at the beginning of an intervention and at the end. An administrative control process as in the SCIM administration can ensure the successful performance of such an assessment toolkit. However, it was observed that assessments of motor function, mobility and self-care are well established, while others concerning autonomic nerve system, mental health, participation, and environment are still missing.

This study reveals that for different patient subgroups, additional assessments were administered in addition to the general assessments. That is, clinicians’ selected additional specific clinically indicated assessments based on the needs of individual patients and the goal-setting process. The choice of assessments was based on clinical or scientific reasoning. To achieve a relevant and valid standard, the selected assessments were psychometrically tested. For global comparison and standardized reporting, the different domains from a worldwide functioning standard have not yet been sufficiently covered. Further research on the implementation of outcome measures in clinical management is recommended.