Bulletin of the World Health Organization (Aug 2010)

Disability after encephalitis: development and validation of a new outcome score

  • Penny Lewthwaite,
  • Ashia Begum,
  • Mong How Ooi,
  • Brian Faragher,
  • Boon Foo Lai,
  • Indunil Sandaradura,
  • Anand Mohan,
  • Gaurav Mandhan,
  • Pratibha Meharwade,
  • S Subhashini,
  • Gulia Abhishek,
  • Asma Begum,
  • Srihari Penkulinti,
  • M Veera Shankar,
  • R Ravikumar,
  • Carolyn Young,
  • Mary Jane Cardosa,
  • V Ravi,
  • See Chang Wong,
  • Rachel Kneen,
  • Tom Solomon

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 88, no. 8
pp. 584 – 592

Abstract

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OBJECTIVE: To develop a simple tool for assessing the severity of disability resulting from Japanese encephalitis and whether, as a result, a child is likely to be dependent. METHODS: A new outcome score based on a 15-item questionnaire was developed after a literature review, examination of current assessment tools, discussion with experts and a pilot study. The score was used to evaluate 100 children in Malaysia (56 Japanese encephalitis patients, 2 patients with encephalitis of unknown etiology and 42 controls) and 95 in India (36 Japanese encephalitis patients, 41 patients with encephalitis of unknown etiology and 18 controls). Inter- and intra-observer variability in the outcome score was determined and the score was compared with full clinical assessment. FINDINGS: There was good inter-observer agreement on using the new score to identify likely dependency (K = 0.942 for Malaysian children; K = 0.786 for Indian children) and good intra-observer agreement (K = 1.000 and 0.902, respectively). In addition, agreement between the new score and clinical assessment was also good (K = 0.906 and 0.762, respectively). The sensitivity and specificity of the new score for identifying children likely to be dependent were 100% and 98.4% in Malaysia and 100% and 93.8% in India. Positive and negative predictive values were 84.2% and 100% in Malaysia and 65.6% and 100% in India. CONCLUSION: The new tool for assessing disability in children after Japanese encephalitis was simple to use and scores correlated well with clinical assessment.