Contact James
F. Malec, Ph.D., L.P., Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana at
Citation Malec, JF. (2012). The
Advocacy Activity Scale. The Center for Outcome Measurement
in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/
combi/aas ( accessed
).
Introduction
to the Advocacy Activity Scale
In the absence of a measure specific to brain injury, the Advocacy Activities Scale (AAS) was developed to provide a measure of involvement in a range of activities representing advocacy for people with acquired brain injury. The AAS was based on measures with demonstrated internal consistency and reliability in studies of developmental disability advocacy1,2 and underwent further psychometric development and validation in a study of a sample of responses from 322 individuals with ABI and their significant others.3
1. Nachsen J, Andersen L, Jamieson J. The Parent Advocacy Scale: Measuring advocacy in parents of children with special needs. J Developmental Disabilities, 2001;8(1):93-105.
2. Schulz AJ, Israel BA, Zimmerman MA, Checkoway BN. Empowerment as a multi-level construct: perceived control at the individual, organizational and community levels. Health Education Research: Theory & Practice, 1995;10(3):309-27.
3. Malec JF, Brown AW, Moessner AM. Two new measures for assessing advocacy activities and perceived control after acquired brain injury. Disability and Rehabilitation, 2010; 32(1):33-40.
Information
regarding the MPAI was contributed by the Rehabilitation Hospital of Indiana. Please
contact James F. Malec, Ph.D., L.P. at
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for more
information.
If
you find the information in the COMBI useful, please mention it
when citing sources of information. The information on the Advocacy
Activity Scale may be cited as:
Malec, JF. (2012). The Advocacy Activity Scale. The Center for
Outcome Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/combi/aas
( accessed
).