Contact Tessa
Hart , PhD, Moss TBI Model System at
Citation Hart, T. (2008). The
Moss Attention Rating Scale. The Center for Outcome Measurement
in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/
combi/mars ( accessed
).
Introduction
to the Moss Attention Rating Scale
The
Moss Attention Rating Scale (MARS) was developed by John Whyte,
MD, PhD, Tessa Hart, PhD, and colleagues at the Moss TBI Model System
at MossRehab Hospital and Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute.
Collaborators from other TBI Model System centers were also instrumental
in testing the reliability of the MARS.
Attention
deficits are nearly ubiquitous after TBI, but can be somewhat problematic
to measure for several reasons. First, “attention” is
not a unitary construct but encompasses a number of cognitive processes
from arousal and basic orienting to higher level processes overlapping
with executive control (multi-tasking, error monitoring, etc.).
Psychometric measures of some of these constructs are available,
but an attention battery may not be feasible in the clinical setting,
either because of time constraints or because patients are too impaired
to undergo testing. Traditional attention tests are typically highly
structured, time-limited, and administered in an environment that
minimizes distractions. Thus, they may not adequately measure clinically
important dimensions of attention such as resistance to distraction,
the ability to make decisions about how to deploy one’s attention,
or consistency of attention over time. One may make informal or
bedside assessments of a patient’s attention in the real-world
environment, but these may not be reliable, and do not allow for
quantitative assessment of changes over time (or in response to
treatment).
The
MARS was designed as an observational rating scale to provide a
reliable, quantitative and ecologically valid measure of attention-related
behavior after TBI. Items were developed and refined using literature
review and expert consultation, focus groups of expert TBI clinicians,
and the results of two pilot studies (see Whyte et al., 2003). A
45-item research version of the MARS was subjected to item response
analysis (Whyte et al., 2003) and both exploratory and confirmatory
factor analysis (Hart et al., 2006) to produce the current, 22-item
MARS. Each item is a behavioral descriptor rated on a 5-point Likert-type
scale according to how well that behavior describes the patient,
ranging from “definitely true” to “definitely
false.” Items are phrased so that the rater considers behaviors
indicative of both good and impaired attention. Half the items relate
to the 3 correlated factors found for the MARS: Restlessness/ Distractibility,
Initiation, and Sustained/ Consistent Attention (Hart et al., 2006)
and may be used to compute factor scores. The total raw MARS score
may be converted to an interval metric from 0-100 (see Scoring section
for how to compute factor and logit scores).
Since
the MARS is based on observable behavior it is not appropriate for
use with patients in the minimally conscious or vegetative states;
validation studies thus far have been restricted to patients at
Rancho level IV or higher. Item response analysis suggested that
the “difficulty level” of the MARS is most appropriate
for persons with moderate to severe attention deficits (Whyte et
al., 2003). It has been tested thus far in inpatient TBI rehabilitation
settings.
Information
regarding the MARS was contributed by the Moss TBI Model Sytem,
Philadelphia. Please contact Tessa Hart, Ph.D., 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 MARS
may be cited as:
Hart, T. (2008). The Moss Attention Rating Scale. The Center
for Outcome Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/combi/mars
( accessed
).