ADL General Collection Information: Difference between revisions

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* [[:Category:ADL | ADL]] - assess functional status during the '''first 24 hours''' after the patient has been "accepted" to medicine service by a medicine service attending physician. 
'''Activities of Daily Living''' (ADL) refers to daily self-care activities within an individual's place of residence, in outdoor environments, or both. The evaluation tool used by Medicine is the Katz ADL and is used for all Medicine patients.
* If dependance on an ADL is induced solely by medical intervention, estimate the ADL without intervention. ADL assesses a patient ''"capability"'' to perform a certain activity if allowed. Patients who are ordered not to do a certain activity should '''not''' be assessed as requiring assistance. If patient ''would be able'' to perform the activity if allowed then they are to be assessed as '''"unassisted"'''
* If the patient is '''surgical''' take the ADL prior to surgery. This information is from Fran Lindell who gets the renal transplants.


== where to get the data==
Specifically, the Katz ADL tool is used to:
This information can be obtained from a variety of sources '''in the first 24 hours''' depending on the timing and details documented.For example:
* Assess a patient's functional status as a measurement of their ability to perform activities of daily living independently.
*OT/PT intial assessment
* Rank adequacy of performance in six functions: bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, and feeding.
*nursing activity flow sheets if used
*Nursing data base or Primary patient care record
*Integrated progress notes
*risk assessment for falls form if used


== Reference ==
Performance of each of the activities is evaluated as unassisted (0 points), minor assistance (3 points), or major assistance (6 points).
*Studies of Illness in the Aged: The Index of ADL; a standardized measure of ...ological and Psychological functioning. by Katz S, et al.. Copyright 1963 by the American Medical Association. Reprinted with permission of AMA via the Copyright Clearance Center.  


* S Katz, TD Downs, HR Cash, RC Grotz, (1970). Index of Activities of Daily Living, ''The Gerontologist'', 1:20-301.
== Activities ==


{| class="wikitable"
! Activity || Description || Unassisted || Minor Assistance || Major Assistance
|-
|  [[ADL Bathing | Bathing]]
|| Either sponge bath, tub bath, or shower
|| Receives no assistance (gets in and out of tub if tub is the usual means of bathing)
|| Receives assistance in bathing only one part of the body (such as the back or leg)
|| Receives assistance in bathing more than one part of the body (or not bathed)
|-
|  [[ADL Dressing | Dressing]]
|| Gets clothes from closets and drawers including underclothes, outer garments, and using fasteners, e.g., for braces
|| Gets clothes and gets completely dressed without assistance
|| Gets their clothes and gets dressed without assistance except in tying shoes or buttoning or zipping up items
|| Receives assistance in getting clothes or in getting dressed or stays partly or completely undressed
|-
|  [[ADL Toileting | Toileting]]
|| Going to the "toilet room" for bowel movement and urine elimination; cleaning self after elimination, and arranging clothes
|| Goes to "toilet room", cleans self, and arranges clothes without assistance; may use object for support such as cane, walker, or wheelchair and may manage night bedpan or commode, emptying same in the morning
|| Receives assistance in going to "toilet room" or in cleansing self or in arranging clothes after elimination or in use of night bedpan or commode
|| Doesn't go to "toilet room" for elimination process
|-
|  [[ADL Transferring | Transferring ]]
|| Moving from one place to another while performing activities
|| Moves in and out of bed as well as in and out of chair without assistance; may use object for support such as cane or walker
|| Moves in and out of bed or chair with assistance
|| Doesn't get out of bed
|-
|  [[ADL Continence | Continence ]]
|| Control of urination and bowel movements
|| Controls urination and bowel movement completely by self, including patients with chronic renal failure; manages Foley at home on own (Foley is inserted solely to keep track of fluid output)
|| Has occasional "accidents"
|| Supervision helps keep urine or bowel control; catheter is used, or patient is incontinent; Foley is used because patient is unable to control bladder function (if it cannot be determined if the patient would be continent without a foley and the patient has a Foley, then score as major)
|-
|  [[ADL Feeding | Feeding ]]
|| Preparing and eating food
|| Feeds self without assistance; NPO due to pre-OP, tests or procedures or GI bleeding
|| Feeds self except for getting assistance in cutting meat or buttering bread
|| Receives assistance in feeding of is fed partly or completely by using tubes or intravenous fluids; dysphagia
|}


[[Category:ADL|*]]
== Assessment guidelines ==
 
An ADL assessment is conducted by the attending physician during the first 24 hours after arrival of the patient to a Medicine unit. The ADL assesses a patient's capability to perform a certain activity irrespective of any subsequent medical intervention. Moreover, restrictions on a patient's activities should not be assessed as requiring assistance. If the patient would be able to perform the activity if allowed then they are to be assessed accordingly. An ADL assessment should also occur prior to surgery.
 
== 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)
 
== References ==
 
* 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.

Revision as of 09:47, 2013 January 11

Activities of Daily Living (ADL) refers to daily self-care activities within an individual's place of residence, in outdoor environments, or both. The evaluation tool used by Medicine is the Katz ADL and is used for all Medicine patients.

Specifically, the Katz ADL tool is used to:

  • Assess a patient's functional status as a measurement of their ability to perform activities of daily living independently.
  • Rank adequacy of performance in six functions: bathing, dressing, toileting, transferring, continence, and feeding.

Performance of each of the activities is evaluated as unassisted (0 points), minor assistance (3 points), or major assistance (6 points).

Activities

Activity Description Unassisted Minor Assistance Major Assistance
Bathing Either sponge bath, tub bath, or shower Receives no assistance (gets in and out of tub if tub is the usual means of bathing) Receives assistance in bathing only one part of the body (such as the back or leg) Receives assistance in bathing more than one part of the body (or not bathed)
Dressing Gets clothes from closets and drawers including underclothes, outer garments, and using fasteners, e.g., for braces Gets clothes and gets completely dressed without assistance Gets their clothes and gets dressed without assistance except in tying shoes or buttoning or zipping up items Receives assistance in getting clothes or in getting dressed or stays partly or completely undressed
Toileting Going to the "toilet room" for bowel movement and urine elimination; cleaning self after elimination, and arranging clothes Goes to "toilet room", cleans self, and arranges clothes without assistance; may use object for support such as cane, walker, or wheelchair and may manage night bedpan or commode, emptying same in the morning Receives assistance in going to "toilet room" or in cleansing self or in arranging clothes after elimination or in use of night bedpan or commode Doesn't go to "toilet room" for elimination process
Transferring Moving from one place to another while performing activities Moves in and out of bed as well as in and out of chair without assistance; may use object for support such as cane or walker Moves in and out of bed or chair with assistance Doesn't get out of bed
Continence Control of urination and bowel movements Controls urination and bowel movement completely by self, including patients with chronic renal failure; manages Foley at home on own (Foley is inserted solely to keep track of fluid output) Has occasional "accidents" Supervision helps keep urine or bowel control; catheter is used, or patient is incontinent; Foley is used because patient is unable to control bladder function (if it cannot be determined if the patient would be continent without a foley and the patient has a Foley, then score as major)
Feeding Preparing and eating food Feeds self without assistance; NPO due to pre-OP, tests or procedures or GI bleeding Feeds self except for getting assistance in cutting meat or buttering bread Receives assistance in feeding of is fed partly or completely by using tubes or intravenous fluids; dysphagia

Assessment guidelines

An ADL assessment is conducted by the attending physician during the first 24 hours after arrival of the patient to a Medicine unit. The ADL assesses a patient's capability to perform a certain activity irrespective of any subsequent medical intervention. Moreover, restrictions on a patient's activities should not be assessed as requiring assistance. If the patient would be able to perform the activity if allowed then they are to be assessed accordingly. An ADL assessment should also occur prior to surgery.

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)

References

  • 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.