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Dive into the research topics where Margo van Hartingsveldt is active.

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Featured researches published by Margo van Hartingsveldt.


Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology | 2011

Standardized tests of handwriting readiness: a systematic review of the literature

Margo van Hartingsveldt; Imelda J. M. de Groot; Pauline Aarts; Maria W.G. Nijhuis-van der Sanden

Aim  To establish if there are psychometrically sound standardized tests or test items to assess handwriting readiness in 5‐ and 6‐year‐old children on the levels of occupations activities/tasks and performance.


Occupational Therapy International | 2012

The Pirate group intervention protocol: description and a case report of a modified constraint-induced movement therapy combined with bimanual training for young children with unilateral spastic cerebral palsy.

Pauline Aarts; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Patricia G. Anderson; Ingrid van den Tillaar; Jan van der Burg; A.C.H. Geurts

The purpose of this article was to describe a child-friendly modified constraint-induced movement therapy protocol that is combined with goal-directed task-specific bimanual training (mCIMT-BiT). This detailed description elucidates the approach and supports various research reports. This protocol is used in a Pirate play group setting and aims to extend bimanual skills in play and self-care activities for children with cerebral palsy and unilateral spastic paresis of the upper limb. To illustrate the content and course of treatment and its effect, a case report of a two-year-old boy is presented. After the eight-week mCIMT-BiT intervention, the child improved the capacity of his affected arm and hand in both quantitative and qualitative terms and his bimanual performance in daily life as assessed by the Assisting Hand Assessment, ABILHAND-Kids, Video Observations Aarts and Aarts Module Determine Developmental Disregard, Canadian Occupational Performance Measure and Goal Attainment Scaling. It is argued that improvement of affected upper-limb capacity in a test situation may be achieved and retained relatively easily, but it may take a lot more training to stabilize the results and automate motor control of the upper limb. Future studies with groups of children should elaborate on these intensity and generalization issues.


Physical & Occupational Therapy in Pediatrics | 2014

Development of the Writing Readiness Inventory Tool in Context (WRITIC)

Margo van Hartingsveldt; Liesbeth de Vries; Edith H. C. Cup; Imelda J. M. de Groot; Maria W.G. Nijhuis-van der Sanden

ABSTRACT This article describes the development of the Writing Readiness Inventory Tool in Context (WRITIC), a measurement evaluating writing readiness in Dutch kindergarten children (5 and 6 years old). Content validity was established through 10 expert evaluations in three rounds. Construct validity was established with 251 children following regular education. To identify scale constructs, factor analysis was performed. Discriminative validity was established by examining contrast groups with good (n = 142) and poor (n = 109) performers in paper-and-pencil tasks. Content validity was high with 94.4% agreement among the experts. Two reliable factors were found in the performance of paper-and-pencil tasks with Cronbachs alphas of 0.82 and 0.69 respectively. The contrast groups differed significantly in two WRITIC subdomains: “Sustained attention” and “Task performance”. Our findings indicated that the WRITIC is feasible for use in the classroom.


Disability and Rehabilitation | 2016

The construct validity of the Dutch version of the activity card sort

Soemitro Poerbodipoero; Ingrid Hwm Sturkenboom; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Maria W.G. Nijhuis-van der Sanden; Maud Graff

Abstract Purpose: Establishing construct validity of the ACS-NL in individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD). Method: Discriminative validity was established in 191 community-dwelling individuals with PD using an extreme groups design (Hoehn and Yahr stages 1 and 3). Convergent validity was determined by relating the performance scores of the ACS-NL to the scores of the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) and the Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire (PDQ-39) scores, and relating ACS-NL satisfaction scores to the COPM scores and to the Utrecht Scale for Evaluation of Rehabilitation Participation (USER-P). Results: The ACS-NL discriminated between individuals with PD with H&Y stages 1 and 3 (U = 524.5, Z = −5.453). ACS-NL performance scores correlated weakly with COPM scores (r = (0).19) and moderately with PDQ-39 scores (r = 0.44–0.55). The ACS-NL satisfaction scores correlated weakly with COPM scores (r = 0.23), and moderately with USER-P scores (r ≥ 0.40). Conclusions: This study contributed to the validation of the ACS-NL. The assessment enhances the possibility of monitoring participation in activities in individuals with PD. Implications for Rehabilitation The ACS-NL appears to hold good potential for use in the assessment of participation in activities in individuals with PD. The ACS-NL has added value parallel to administration of other instruments measuring participation (COPM) and quality of life (PDQ-39). This study demonstrates the capacity of the ACS to measure a unique construct of participation and helps to improve the psychometric properties and administration of the ACS-NL in practice.


Expert Review of Quality of Life in Cancer Care | 2018

Occupational therapy in cancer rehabilitation: going beyond physical function in enabling activity and participation

Corine Rijpkema; Margo van Hartingsveldt; M.M. Stuiver

Many cancer patients and cancer survivors experience physical, psychological, and social problems due to the disease and its treatment, which impact negatively on their health-related quality of li...


Occupational Therapy International | 2015

Evaluating Fine Motor Coordination in Children Who Are Not Ready for Handwriting: Which Test Should We Take?

Liesbeth de Vries; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Edith H. C. Cup; Maria W.G. Nijhuis-van der Sanden; Imelda J. M. de Groot

When children are not ready to write, assessment of fine motor coordination may be indicated. The purpose of this study was to evaluate which fine motor test, the Nine-Hole Peg Test (9-HPT) or the newly developed Timed Test of In-Hand Manipulation (Timed-TIHM), correlates best with handwriting readiness as measured by the Writing Readiness Inventory Tool In Context-Task Performance (WRITIC-TP). From the 119 participating children, 43 were poor performers. Convergent validity of the 9-HPT and Timed-TIHM with WRITIC-TP was determined, and test-retest reliability of the Timed-TIHM was examined in 59 children. The results showed that correlations of the 9-HPT and Timed-TIHM with the WRITIC-TP were similar (rs = -0.40). The 9-HPT and the complex rotation subtask of the Timed-TIHM had a low correlation with the WRITIC-TP in poor performers (rs = -0.30 and -0.32 respectively). Test-retest reliability of the Timed-TIHM was significant (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient = 0.71). Neither of these two fine motor tests is appeared superior. They both relate to different aspects of fine motor performance. One of the limitations of the methodology was unequal numbers of children in subgroups. It is recommended that further research is indicated to evaluate the relation between development of fine motor coordination and handwriting proficiency, on the Timed-TIHM in different age groups.


Scandinavian Journal of Occupational Therapy | 2018

Are the school version of the assessment of motor and process skills measures valid for German-speaking children?

Vera C. Kaelin; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Brigitte Elisabeth Gantschnig; Anne G. Fisher

Abstract Background: There are no validated assessment tools for evaluating quality of schoolwork task performance of children living in German-speaking Europe (GSE). Objective: To determine whether the international age-normative means of the School Version of the Assessment of Motor and Process Skills (School AMPS) are valid for use in GSE. Methods: The participants were 159 typically-developing children, 3-12 years, from GSE. We examined the proportions of School AMPS measures falling within ±2 standard deviation (SD) of the international age-normative means, and evaluated for significant group differences (p < 0.05) in mean School AMPS measures between the GSE sample and the international age-normative sample using one-sample Z tests. When significant mean differences were found, we evaluated if the differences were clinically meaningful. Results: At least 95% of the GSE School AMPS measures fell within ±2 SD of the international age-normative means for the School AMPS. The only significant mean differences were for 6- (p < 0.01) and 8-year-olds (p = 0.02), and only the 6-year-old school process mean difference was clinically meaningful. Conclusions: Because the only identified clinically meaningful difference was associated with likely scoring error of one rater, the international age-normative means of the School AMPS appear to be valid for use with children in GSE.


Health & Social Care in The Community | 2018

Exploring the collaboration between formal and informal care from the professional perspective—A thematic synthesis

Aldiene Henrieke Hengelaar; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Yvette Wittenberg; Faridi van Etten-Jamaludin; Rick Kwekkeboom; Ton Satink

In Dutch policy and at the societal level, informal caregivers are ideally seen as essential team members when creating, together with professionals, co-ordinated support plans for the persons for whom they care. However, collaboration between professionals and informal caregivers is not always effective. This can be explained by the observation that caregivers and professionals have diverse backgrounds and frames of reference regarding providing care. This thematic synthesis sought to examine and understand how professionals experience collaboration with informal caregivers to strengthen the care triad. PubMed, Medline, PsycINFO, Embase, Cochrane/Central and CINAHL were searched systematically until May 2015, using specific key words and inclusion criteria. Twenty-two articles were used for thematic synthesis. Seven themes revealed different reflections by professionals illustrating the complex, multi-faceted and dynamic interface of professionals and informal care. Working in collaboration with informal caregivers requires professionals to adopt a different way of functioning. Specific attention should be paid to the informal caregiver, where the focus now is mainly on the client for whom they care. This is difficult to attain due to different restrictions experienced by professionals on policy and individual levels. Specific guidelines and training for the professionals are necessary in the light of the current policy changes in the Netherlands, where an increased emphasis is placed on informal care structures.


Occupational Therapy International | 2005

Reliability and validity of the fine motor scale of the Peabody Developmental Motor Scales-2.

Margo van Hartingsveldt; Edith H. C. Cup; R.A.B. Oostendorp


Journal of the American Geriatrics Society | 2013

Sensor monitoring to measure and support daily functioning for independently living older people: a systematic review and road map for further development

Margriet Pol; Soemitro Poerbodipoero; Saskia Robben; Joost G. Daams; Margo van Hartingsveldt; Rien de Vos; Sophia E. de Rooij; Ben J. A. Kröse; Bianca M. Buurman

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Edith H. C. Cup

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Margriet Pol

Hogeschool van Amsterdam

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Sophia E. de Rooij

University Medical Center Groningen

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