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Inter-assessor reliability of practice based biomechanical assessment of the foot
and ankle

Jarvis, HL; Nester, CJ; Jones, R; Williams, AE; Bowden, PD

Authors

HL Jarvis

CJ Nester

AE Williams

PD Bowden



Abstract

Background
There is no consensus on which protocols should be used to assess foot and lower limb
biomechanics in clinical practice. The reliability of many assessments has been questioned by
previous research. The aim of this investigation was to (i) identify (through consensus) what
biomechanical examinations are used in clinical practice and (ii) evaluate the inter-assessor
reliability of some of these examinations.
Methods
Part1: Using a modified Delphi technique 12 podiatrists derived consensus on the
biomechanical examinations used in clinical practice. Part 2: Eleven podiatrists assessed 6
participants using a subset of the assessment protocol derived in Part 1. Examinations were
compared between assessors.
Results
Clinicians choose to estimate rather than quantitatively measure foot position and motion.
Poor inter-assessor reliability was recorded for all examinations. Intra-class correlation
coefficient values (ICC) for relaxed calcaneal stance position were less than 0.23 and were
less than 0.14 for neutral calcaneal stance position. For the examination of ankle joint
dorsiflexion, ICC values suggest moderate reliability (less than 0.61). The results of a random
effects ANOVA highlight that participant (up to 5.7°), assessor (up to 5.8°) and random (upto 5.7°) error all contribute to the total error (up to 9.5° for relaxed calcaneal stance position,
up to 10.7° for the examination of ankle joint dorsiflexion). Kappa Fleiss values for
categorisation of first ray position and mobility were less than 0.05 and for limb length
assessment less than 0.02, indicating slight agreement.
Conclusion
Static biomechanical assessment of the foot, leg and lower limb is an important protocol in
clinical practice, but the key examinations used to make inferences about dynamic foot
function and to determine orthotic prescription are unreliable.

Citation

and ankle. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, 5(14), https://doi.org/10.1186/1757-1146-5-14

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2012
Deposit Date Jun 20, 2014
Publicly Available Date Jun 20, 2014
Journal Journal of foot and ankle research
Publisher Springer Verlag
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 5
Issue 14
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/1757-1146-5-14
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1757-1146-5-14
Related Public URLs http://www.jfootankleres.com/

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