Guest guest Posted July 12, 1998 Report Share Posted July 12, 1998 The attached note from Guccione (APTA Division of Practice and Research) is forwarded, with permission, because I think it might be of general interest. I, for one, would be very interested in more information regarding the MDS-PAC development. Anyone have any further insights? Mark -- Mark R Eliason, PT meliason@... Apple Valley, Minnesota, USA I have been reading the posts on the MDS and the FIM. I would like to share with you some of the work we have been doing at APTA regarding the MDS, which I hope you will also share with the members of the listserve. HCFA is currently revising the 9th draft of the Post-Acute Care MDS (MDS-PAC), which promises to be " THE " MDS for all settings in the near future and replace the MDS 2.0 in all settings. It has even been mentioned that the MDS-PAC will replace the OASIS in home health somewhere down the road. APTA, along with the other members of the Trialliance (AOTA and ASHA), has been working directly with the developers of the MDS-PAC to ensure that there is some relevance to rehabilitation, a severe shortcoming in the first 8 drafts. APTA as well as AOTA and ASHA have strenuously objected to HCFA's intention to use the MDS-PAC as an outcome instrument based on the fact that the information collected is far too crude to ensure that patient groupings were homogeneous and received comparable therapy as interventions. After the addition/modification of 23 specific items, we feel more comfortable in supporting the MDS-PAC as a descriptive tool which may be appropriate for certain kinds of comparative studies, but do not support use of the MDS-PAC as a therapy-specific measure of outcomes. We have also been able to bring some of the terminology closer to Guide. However, there is no way that the MDS is suitable for measuring function at the level necessary to plan interventiion or show the effectiveness of therapy, except in the broadest sense. The FIM has been shown to be reliable and valid, but primarily in stroke patients. There is some indication that it is not sensitive to change in patients without multisystem impairments, eg, the patient with severe degenerative arthritis of both knees in contrast to the patient with stroke, particularly with its summative scoring method. Due to the intense lobbying of the FIM supporters against the 6th draft version of the MDS-PAC, certain components of the FIM were incorporated into the latest versions of the MDS-PAC. Originally, the MDS-PAC was to have been completed by July 1, 1998. It has obviously missed that deadline. I am somewhat concerned that MDS is being treated as a functional assessment tool. At best, it is a summary of complex functional status data which is collected by therapists. Similarly, I am concerned that FIM proponents automatically assume that it is the single best instrument for all settings involving older adults, especially inpatient rehabilitation. Consistent with the Guide, functional assessment instruments should be selected for their relevance to the characteristics of the patient population. One size does NOT fit all. For some populations, the FIM will be an excellent tool. However, in my experience it does not work well in outpatient settings such as geriatric primary care clinics, where the population's lowest level of function is higher than an inpatient population's average level of function. Neither does the SF-36 which is the most psychometrically documented instrument of all time, because it was developed to be used on general medical adult populations. The real key is the match between clinical needs and a reliable and valid instrument. Thus, all of us need to distinguish between the necessary paperwork such as the MDS (which does yield some broad-brush insight) with functional assessment for a specific population or patient with sufficient detail to plan and monitor treatment. Toward this end, APTA is busily engaged in developing Part 4 of the Guide, which will cover the standardization of functional assessment in physical therapy. We anticipate that this project will be completed near the end of 2000 and available by 2001. A. Guccione, PhD, PT, FAPTA Senior Vice President Division of Practice and Research American Physical Therapy Association Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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