Objective: To establish the reliability of an interview approach to the Fun
ctional Independence Measure (FIM).
Design: Two raters were present at the same time during the interviews in t
he home and did independent ratings of the 18 FIM items. The interview proc
edure was repealed within a week by another two raters in the clinic.
Subjects: Sixty-three stroke survivors (median age 63 years, range 18-71 ye
ars) were studied approximately two years after onset.
Raters: Three occupational therapists and one nurse.
Methods: Reliability was calculated as unweighted kappa statistics, percent
age agreement (PA), and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC).
Results: Best agreement was found in the motor items of FIM. The kappa stat
istics showed good to excellent inter-rater values during the same intervie
w except for the Social interaction item. The ICCs based on sum-score for m
otor (0.92) and social-cognitive items (0.75) respectively, were similar to
those reported in the literature. The repeated interview by different rate
rs showed less stable agreement according to kappa values for the items dea
ling with transfers, locomotion and social-cognition.
Conclusions: FIM assessments showed high inter-rater agreement for the same
interview setting (home as well as clinic), but the stability of the measu
re over time with a repeated interview by different raters was somewhat les
s satisfactory.