Needs, problems and rehabilitation goals of young children with cerebral palsy as formulated in the rehabilitation activities profile for children

Autor: Anne M. Boonstra, Klaas Postema, Jans G. Ties, Alida C. E. de Blecourt, Han Nakken, Heleen A. Reinders-Messelink, Johan W. Groothoff, B. J. G. Nijhuis
Rok vydání: 2008
Předmět:
Male
Activities of daily living
medicine.medical_treatment
COLLABORATION
FAMILIES
integrated treatment plan
Disability Evaluation
PARENTS
International Classification of Functioning
Disability and Health

Activities of Daily Living
IMPLEMENTATION
DISABLED-CHILDREN
Child
Rehabilitation
communication
General Medicine
rehabilitation report
Child
Preschool

RELIABILITY
Needs assessment
Workforce
Female
Psychology
Goals
Needs Assessment
Adult
paediatric rehabilitation
medicine.medical_specialty
SERVICE NEEDS
education.educational_degree
Physical Therapy
Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Rehabilitation Centers
Habilitation
Cerebral palsy
medicine
HABILITATION
Humans
education
Goal setting
TEAM
goal setting
Cerebral Palsy
medicine.disease
Family medicine
Physical therapy
ICF-CY
DISABILITIES
Interdisciplinary Communication
Zdroj: Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 40(5), 347-354. FOUNDATION REHABILITATION INFORMATION
ISSN: 1650-1977
DOI: 10.2340/16501977-0182
Popis: Objective: To describe the content of needs, problems and goals of 41 Dutch children with cerebral palsy using the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health for Children and Youth (ICF-CY) as a classification system. To evaluate the adherence of formulations of needs, problems and goals to specifications of the Rehabilitation Activities Profile for Children.Methods: Raw text data were extracted and organized. Two raters independently weighed the entries' quality against the specifications and linked the extracted content to ICF-CY categories.Results: In 12% of the reports no needs, and in 24% no principal goals, were formulated. Needs mostly pertained to the activities-and-participation domain (65%), whereas problems and goals covered all 3 ICF-CY domains. None of the needs were prioritized and 79% met the quality criterion of description of a problem/desire. Twenty-four percent of the problems were described in the activity-and-participation domain and 83% referred to a treatable problem. Fifty-six percent of the goals were formulated in terms of intended result/effect and 63% as child/parent actions.Conclusion: Insight is provided into the content of rehabilitation programmes for children with cerebral palsy. To optimize the quality of the reports, research on reasons for non-adherence to specifications of the Rehabilitation Activities Profile is needed.
Databáze: OpenAIRE