The Barthel index measures the likelihood of being able to live at home with a degree of independence following discharge from hospital. Ten basic activities of daily living (ADL) are captured: bowels, bladder, grooming, toilet use, feeding, transfers, walking, dressing, climbing stairs, and bathing.JRC.DDG.01-Econometrics and applied statistic
As Barthel Index (BI) quantifies motor impairment but not breathlessness, the use of only this index...
The effectiveness of therapeutic interventions in acute stroke trials is traditionally measured with...
This study examined the functional status of thirty persons from 75 to 92 years of age following hos...
Draw a vertical line upward from the corresponding value of each predictor to the points bar to obta...
This study aimed to determine whether the Frenchay Activities Index and the Barthel Index assess dif...
It has been more than 50 years ago, when in 1965 Florence Mahoney and Dorothea Barthel published an ...
Aims: The assessment of functional status is a more appropriate measure in the older people than tra...
We usually find low levels of fitness condition affect other aspects of living for people with ID li...
The objective of the present study was to evaluate the activities of daily living (ADLs) using the B...
Stroke is a major cause of long-term disability resulting in the inability to perform daily activiti...
Objectives: The 5-item short form Barthel Index (BI-5) has been shown to be a potentially useful mea...
Objective: To compare the appropriateness and responsiveness of the Barthel Index and the Functional...
Objective: Apply Barthel’s index to an assessment of persons with spinal cord injury, hospitalized a...
Draw a vertical line upward from the corresponding value of each predictor to the points bar to obta...
Background and Purpose—To justify the summation of scores representing comprehensive activities of d...
As Barthel Index (BI) quantifies motor impairment but not breathlessness, the use of only this index...
The effectiveness of therapeutic interventions in acute stroke trials is traditionally measured with...
This study examined the functional status of thirty persons from 75 to 92 years of age following hos...
Draw a vertical line upward from the corresponding value of each predictor to the points bar to obta...
This study aimed to determine whether the Frenchay Activities Index and the Barthel Index assess dif...
It has been more than 50 years ago, when in 1965 Florence Mahoney and Dorothea Barthel published an ...
Aims: The assessment of functional status is a more appropriate measure in the older people than tra...
We usually find low levels of fitness condition affect other aspects of living for people with ID li...
The objective of the present study was to evaluate the activities of daily living (ADLs) using the B...
Stroke is a major cause of long-term disability resulting in the inability to perform daily activiti...
Objectives: The 5-item short form Barthel Index (BI-5) has been shown to be a potentially useful mea...
Objective: To compare the appropriateness and responsiveness of the Barthel Index and the Functional...
Objective: Apply Barthel’s index to an assessment of persons with spinal cord injury, hospitalized a...
Draw a vertical line upward from the corresponding value of each predictor to the points bar to obta...
Background and Purpose—To justify the summation of scores representing comprehensive activities of d...
As Barthel Index (BI) quantifies motor impairment but not breathlessness, the use of only this index...
The effectiveness of therapeutic interventions in acute stroke trials is traditionally measured with...
This study examined the functional status of thirty persons from 75 to 92 years of age following hos...