Translation, cross-cultural adaptation and Turkish validation of the 25-Question Geriatric Locomotive Function Scale

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Date
2026Author
Sadıkoğlu, MustafaAksan Sadıkoğlu, Büşra
Kaya Mutlu, Ebru
Analay Akbaba, Yıldız
Taşkıran, Hanifegül
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Sadıkoğlu, M., Aksan Sadıkoğlu, B., Kaya Mutlu, E. et al. Translation, Cross-Cultural Adaptation and Turkish Validation of the 25-Question Geriatric Locomotive Function Scale. Ageing Int 51, 2 (2026).Abstract
The 25-Question Geriatric Locomotive Function Scale (GLFS-25) is an assessment
tool developed by Japanese researchers to evaluate locomotive functions in older
adults. The purpose of this study is to translate and culturally adapt the GLFS-25 for
use in Turkey, then determine the scale’s reliability and validity in the Turkish con text. A total of 264 older adults (124 males; mean age: 71.7±6.2 years) participated
in the study. To assess test–retest reliability, 248 participants (112 males; mean age:
71.8±6.2 years) completed the GLFS-25 twice, with an interval of 3 to 14 days.
Construct validity was evaluated using the Katz Index of Activities of Daily Living
(ADL) and the Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale (IADL). Con vergent validity was assessed on the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) for pain and the
Geriatric Depression Scale. The GLFS-25 Turkish showed excellent internal con sistency with Cronbach’s alpha coefficient=0.95 (95% CI=0.95–0.96). Similarly,
The GLFS-25 Turkish showed very high test-retest reliability with ICC=0.96 (95%
CI=0.94–0.97). Correlations were good between GLFS-25 Turkish version and the
Katz ADL (r = -0.62), Lawton IADL indices (r = -0.63), VAS-rest (r = -0.61),
VAS-activity (r = -0.64), VAS-night (r = -0.63), and Geriatric Depression Scale (r
= -0.67) (p=0.001). We observed no ceiling and floor effects. The Turkish version
of the GLFS-25 demonstrated good reliability and validity and can be effectively
utilized to assess locomotive functions in Turkish-speaking older adults. This scale
can be provides clinicians and researchers with a culturally adapted, psychometri cally sound tool for evaluating mobility-related impairments in this population.
Source
Ageing InternationalVolume
51URI
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12126-025-09636-6https://doi.org/10.1007/s12126-025-09636-6
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12780/1314

















