Acceptability of self-completion versus face-to-face use of a vertebral fragility fracture clinical decision tool for use in older people with back pain in the UK
Tanzeela Y. Khalid, Wendy Wilmott, Clare Shere, Tim J. Peters, Sarah Drew, Zoe Paskins, Emma M. Clark

TL;DR
This study compared self-completion and face-to-face use of a vertebral fracture screening tool called Vfrac in older adults with back pain, finding that physical measurements should be done face-to-face for accuracy.
Contribution
The study provides evidence that physical measurements for Vfrac must be taken face-to-face to ensure accurate results.
Findings
Moderate agreement (kappa 0.53) was found between self-completion and face-to-face Vfrac scores.
Physical measurements showed only slight agreement when self-reported versus face-to-face.
A hybrid approach with face-to-face measurements and self-completed questions is recommended.
Abstract
This study tested the agreement between self-completion and face-to-face completion of a vertebral fracture clinical decision tool called Vfrac in order to make an evidence-based recommendation of how Vfrac should be used for future research or clinical applications. Findings confirmed that it is necessary to take the physical measurements face-to-face. Around 12% of older adults have vertebral fragility fractures but fewer than one-third are diagnosed. Vfrac is a vertebral fracture screening tool developed to help clinicians identify which patients are at a high risk of having a vertebral fracture, so they can be referred for a spinal radiograph. The aim of this work was to assess the agreement between self-completion and face-to-face use of Vfrac and determine patient preference for use. Adults aged > 65 years who had experienced back pain in the last 4 months were invited to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation · Hip and Femur Fractures · Bone health and osteoporosis research
