ADL General Collection Information: Difference between revisions
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An ADL assessment is usually done within 24 hours of admission (done by allied health or nurses). | An ADL assessment is usually done within 24 hours of admission (done by allied health or nurses). | ||
The ADL assessment we utilize is the patient's state of activity on admission (not at home prior to admission). It takes into consideration acute medical issues that resulted in admission to the hospital. | The ADL assessment we utilize is the patient's state of activity on admission (not at home prior to admission). It takes into consideration acute medical issues that resulted in admission to the hospital. | ||
{{ | {{DiscussTask | | ||
* To clarify this point, when does the 24 hour timeframe begin, from [[Accept DtTm]] or [[Arrive DtTm]] for patients admitted from ER? | |||
** Answer to this also needs to go to [[Change to start collection at accept rather than arrive time]]. Ttenbergen 20:58, 2020 October 21 (CDT) }} | |||
=== Directed Restrictions === | === Directed Restrictions === |
Revision as of 19:58, 2020 October 21
Activities of Daily Living (ADL) refers to daily self-care activities.
Collection Instructions
The ADL assesses a patient's capability to perform a certain activity. Enter the status into the ADL dropdown boxes in the ADL tab in CCMDB.accdb.
Timeframe
An ADL assessment is usually done within 24 hours of admission (done by allied health or nurses). The ADL assessment we utilize is the patient's state of activity on admission (not at home prior to admission). It takes into consideration acute medical issues that resulted in admission to the hospital.
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Directed Restrictions
Directed restrictions on a patient's activities should not be assessed as requiring assistance. For example, if a pt is on bedrest restrictions, it does not mean that they are unable physically to get out of bed. If the patient would be able to perform the activity if allowed then they are to be assessed accordingly.
Where to get data
Data to evaluate ADL can be obtained from the following sources:
- OT/PT initial assessment
- Nursing activity flow sheets (if used)
- Nursing database or primary care patient record
- Integrated progress notes
- Risk assessment for falls form (if used)
Specific Activities collected
See the following for specific coding instructions for the different activities.
Scoring
The field is driven by S_ADLOptions table.
Performance of each of the activities is evaluated as unassisted (0 points), minor assistance (3 points), or major assistance (6 points).
Total ADL Score is the sum of points of all the six activities.
ADL is also part of the ALERT Scale.
Data Use
- ALERT Scale Calculation
- Reported quarterly
- Average
- Frequencies by Categories (e.g. 1-6, 7-12, 13-18, 19-24, 25-30, 31-36)
in CCMDB.accdb
In CCMDB the ADLs are stored as their full words rather than scores, e.g. "ADL_Bathing" might have a value of "unassisted". The values are entered via dropdown list, which is driven by the S_ADLOptions table. In that table there is a column "sorter" with numbers used to change the order the values appear in the dropdown list. The column is not a score and not used for anything beyond sorting.
References/Background
The evaluation tool used for all Medicine patients is the Katz ADL.
- S Katz et al. Studies of illness in the aged: the index of ADL. American Medical Association, 1963.
- S Katz, SD Downs, HR Cash, RC Grotz. Index of daily living. The Gerontologist 1:20-301.