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Participation and Environment Measure×Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale×
OblastDisability StudiesDisability Studies
PorodicaLatent structureLatent structure
Godina nastanka20112002
TvoracWendy Coster, Mary Law, Gary Bedell, Mary Khetani et al.Jeffrey Jutai & Hy Day
TipParent-report participation-and-environment measurement instrumentAssistive-device psychosocial-impact measurement scale
Temeljni izvorCoster, W., Bedell, G., Law, M., Khetani, M. A., Teplicky, R., Liljenquist, K., Gleason, K., & Kao, Y.-C. (2011). Psychometric evaluation of the Participation and Environment Measure for Children and Youth. Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 53(11), 1030-1037. DOI ↗Jutai, J., & Day, H. (2002). Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale (PIADS). Technology and Disability, 14(3), 107-111. DOI ↗
Drugi naziviPEM-CY, Participation and Environment Measure for Children and Youth, Children's Participation and Environment Measure, PEM Child Participation MeasurePIADS, Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale, Assistive Device Psychosocial Impact Measure
Srodne33
SažetakThe Participation and Environment Measure for Children and Youth (PEM-CY) is a caregiver-report instrument that measures how children aged 5 to 17, with and without disabilities, participate in the home, school, and community, and the environmental supports and barriers that shape that participation. Developed by Wendy Coster, Mary Law, Gary Bedell, Mary Khetani and colleagues and published in 2011-2012, the PEM-CY operationalizes the participation construct of the World Health Organization's International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) by asking, for each setting, how often a child takes part, how involved they are, and whether the family desires change, alongside ratings of which environmental features help or hinder. Its distinctive contribution is to measure participation and environment together rather than treating the environment as a separate afterthought.The Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale (PIADS) measures how an assistive device affects a user's quality of life, not whether they are satisfied with it or what it lets them physically do. Developed by Jeffrey Jutai and Hy Day, the 26-item self-report scale captures the device's perceived effect across three dimensions: competence (feelings of efficacy and usefulness), adaptability (willingness to try new things and take part), and self-esteem (emotional well-being and confidence). Each item is rated on a bipolar scale from a strong decrease to a strong increase, so the instrument registers whether a device improves, leaves unchanged, or harms the user's psychosocial functioning — a distinctively quality-of-life-oriented assistive-technology outcome.
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ScholarGateUporedite metode: Participation and Environment Measure · Psychosocial Impact of Assistive Devices Scale. Preuzeto 2026-06-25 sa https://scholargate.app/sr/compare