The FMS is a great tool to uncover asymmetry and movement dysfunction in fitness clients as well as patients in the clinic who are ready to transition back to sport. I have been using this tool consistently for 2.5 years in my practice. One of the questions I have asked myself about the screening tool is how reliable is it?
Click here for an earlier post I wrote on this topic regarding what it tells us as practitioners. One of the challenges with any screen or test is not only validity but reliability. In the April edition of the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, we gain some new insight regarding intra and interrater reliability via 2 new articles.
The first article discusses a controlled laboratory study where repeated measures were used to investigate how experience using the FMS and clinical experience as an athletic trainer (AT) affects the intrarater reliability of FMS testing. The raters (17 men and 21 women who were recruited from the university’s athletic training clinical staff and academic programs), with different levels of FMS and clinical experience (AT students, AT or AT with at least 6 months experience using the FMS) viewed each of the 3 videotaped models.
None of the AT students or AT members had seen or used the FMS previously compared to the AT group with at least 6 months of experience. Each group rated the models on each of the FMS exercises according to the script presented by the lead investigator. A week later the raters watched the same videos again in a different randomized order and rated each model on each exercise.
The intersession scores were examined to establish intrarater reliability of all participants. In addition, the intrarater reliability of different groups of participants (students and clinicians) was compared to infer differences about the influence of clinical experience as an AT along with previous experience using the FMS.
Results:
Key takeaways: