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managing-occupational-therapy-assessments

Structures OT evaluation with ADL assessment, adaptive equipment needs, and work readiness evaluation. Use when conducting OT assessments, evaluating ADL independence, or recommending adaptive equipment.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub

Managing Occupational Therapy Assessments

Structures occupational therapy evaluation using the OTPF-4 (Occupational Therapy Practice Framework, 4th edition) including ADL and IADL performance analysis, upper extremity functional assessment, cognitive-perceptual screening, adaptive equipment recommendations, and home/work environment evaluation.

Why This Skill Exists

Occupational therapy assessment determines a person's ability to perform the daily activities that matter to them — self-care, home management, work, and community participation. OT evaluation drives adaptive equipment prescriptions, home modification recommendations, return-to-work decisions, and level-of-care determinations. CMS and commercial payers require OT documentation to demonstrate occupational performance deficits linked to the medical diagnosis, skilled OT assessment need, and functional outcome potential. Inadequate documentation — listing impairments without connecting them to occupational performance — results in claim denials and fails to capture the OT-specific contribution to rehabilitation. This skill produces evaluation documentation structured per the OTPF-4 framework.


Checkpoint A — Intake Verification

Before beginning OT assessment, confirm:

Required clinical questions:

  • What is the diagnosis and how does it affect the patient's ability to perform daily occupations?
  • What is the patient's occupational profile (roles, routines, valued activities prior to onset)?
  • What is the referral setting (acute care, IRF, outpatient, home health, work rehabilitation)?
  • Are there UE precautions (weight-bearing, ROM limits, surgical restrictions)?
  • What is the patient's cognitive status (oriented, follows commands, safety awareness)?
  • What is the patient's hand dominance and is the dominant hand affected?

Required documents:

  • Physician referral specifying OT evaluation
  • Current medical records with diagnosis and precautions
  • PT evaluation if concurrent (avoid duplication of testing)
  • Prior OT evaluation if continuation of care
  • Home environment description (layout, stairs, bathroom setup) from patient/family
  • Job description or physical demand analysis if work-related

Step 1 — Develop the Occupational Profile (OTPF-4)

The occupational profile captures the client's perspective:

  • Occupational history: What were the patient's daily activities, routines, and roles before onset? (e.g., "retired teacher, lives alone in single-story home, performed all IADLs independently, avid gardener")
  • Patterns of daily living: Typical daily routine (wake time, meals, activities, sleep schedule)
  • Values and priorities: What occupations are most important to the patient? What would they most like to resume?
  • Client factors: Relevant body functions (visual, cognitive, sensory, motor) and body structures (hand, shoulder, spine)
  • Performance patterns: Habits, routines, and roles affected by the condition
  • Contexts: Physical (home layout, community access), social (caregiver support, family dynamics), cultural, personal (age, gender, educational background)

Step 2 — Assess ADL and IADL Performance

Basic ADLs (observe actual performance, do not rely on self-report alone):

| ADL | Assessment Components | Scoring Method | |---|---|---| | Bathing/showering | Transfer in/out, reach all body parts, manage faucets, soap, washcloth | FIM (1-7) or assist level | | Dressing (upper body) | Don/doff shirt, bra, manage fasteners, reach behind | FIM or assist level + time | | Dressing (lower body) | Don/doff pants, socks, shoes, reach feet, manage closures | FIM or assist level | | Grooming | Oral care, hair care, shaving, makeup, nail care | FIM or assist level | | Feeding/eating | Utensil use, cup management, cutting food, bringing to mouth | FIM or assist level | | Toileting | Clothing management, hygiene, transfer on/off toilet | FIM or assist level | | Functional mobility | Bed mobility, transfers (bed, chair, toilet, tub) | FIM or assist level |

Instrumental ADLs (interview and performance-based):

  • Meal preparation: safety (stove use, sharp objects), sequencing, standing tolerance
  • Medication management: identify medications, open containers, follow schedule, fill pillbox
  • Financial management: bill payment, budgeting, check writing
  • Community mobility: driving evaluation screening, public transit use, community navigation
  • Home management: laundry, cleaning, shopping
  • Phone/technology use: make calls, use smartphone, access emergency services

Standardized ADL assessments:

  • FIM (18-item): If in IRF setting; OT typically scores self-care and transfer items
  • Barthel Index: 10-item ADL scale (0-100)
  • Kohlman Evaluation of Living Skills (KELS): 18 tasks across 5 categories; pass/fail scoring; useful for discharge planning
  • Assessment of Motor and Process Skills (AMPS): Observes ADL performance quality; standardized international tool
  • Performance Assessment of Self-Care Skills (PASS): Clinic and home versions; 26 tasks scored on independence, safety, process, and adequacy

Step 3 — Perform Upper Extremity Functional Assessment

UE motor assessment:

  • Active/passive ROM for shoulder, elbow, forearm, wrist, and hand (goniometric measurement)
  • Grip strength (Jamar dynamometer, 3 trials per hand, position II)
  • Pinch strength: lateral, palmar, tip (3 trials each)
  • MMT for UE muscle groups (shoulder, elbow, wrist, hand intrinsics)
  • Coordination: finger-to-nose, rapid alternating movements, nine-hole peg test
  • Sensation: light touch, sharp/dull, proprioception, stereognosis, graphesthesia

Standardized UE assessments:

  • Nine-Hole Peg Test (NHPT): Timed fine motor dexterity; age/sex norms available; dominant hand typically 18-20 seconds
  • Box and Block Test: Gross manual dexterity; blocks transferred in 60 seconds; age/sex norms available
  • Jebsen-Taylor Hand Function Test: 7 subtests of common hand tasks (writing, card turning, small objects, simulated feeding, stacking, large light objects, large heavy objects)
  • Action Research Arm Test (ARAT): 19 items across grasp, grip, pinch, and gross movement; 0-57 total; used for stroke UE recovery tracking
  • DASH Questionnaire: Patient-reported UE disability; 30 items, 0-100 (0=no disability)

Step 4 — Screen Cognitive-Perceptual Function

Cognitive screening (OT-specific functional cognition):

  • MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment): 30-point screening; <26 suggests cognitive impairment
  • Allen Cognitive Level Screen (ACLS): Leather lacing task; scores 3.0-5.8 indicating cognitive processing level and supervision needs
    • Level 3: Unable to live alone, requires 24-hour supervision
    • Level 4: Can perform familiar routine tasks with supervision
    • Level 5: Can learn new tasks; minimal supervision for safety
  • Executive Function Performance Test (EFPT): 4 tasks (cooking, telephone use, medication management, bill paying); measures initiation, execution, and completion
  • Kettle Test: Standardized hot beverage preparation task observing safety and problem-solving

Perceptual assessment (especially post-stroke):

  • Visual neglect: line bisection test, star cancellation test, Catherine Bergego Scale (functional neglect)
  • Body scheme: identify body parts, right/left discrimination
  • Apraxia screening: pantomime tool use, imitate gestures, actual tool use
  • Visual-spatial: clock drawing, copy geometric designs

Step 5 — Recommend Adaptive Equipment and Environmental Modifications

Based on assessment findings, document specific recommendations:

Self-care adaptive equipment:

  • Long-handled sponge, wash mitt, soap-on-a-rope (limited UE ROM or LE weight-bearing)
  • Reacher, sock aid, long-handled shoe horn, elastic shoelaces (limited hip/knee ROM or precautions)
  • Built-up handle utensils, rocker knife, plate guard, nosey cup (limited grip/coordination)
  • Button hook, zipper pull (limited fine motor dexterity)
  • Tub bench or shower chair, handheld showerhead, grab bars (transfer/balance deficits)

Home modification recommendations:

  • Grab bar placement (toilet, tub/shower, as needed — specify locations)
  • Raised toilet seat (with/without arms) — specify height
  • Hospital bed vs. home bed assessment (bed height, side rail need)
  • Threshold ramp, stair rail, stair glide assessment
  • Kitchen modifications (reachable storage, adaptive cutting board, stove knob guards)

Documentation format for equipment recommendations: "Based on right hemiparesis with grip strength 15 lbs (vs. L 65 lbs) and FIM self-care scores of 3-4, the following adaptive equipment is recommended to enable supervised-to-modified-independent ADL performance: [list specific items with clinical justification]."


Checkpoint B — Pre-Finalization Review

Before finalizing OT assessment documentation:

  • [ ] Occupational profile completed with client-centered priorities
  • [ ] ADL/IADL performance observed (not only self-reported) with standardized scoring
  • [ ] UE assessment includes ROM, strength, coordination, and sensation
  • [ ] Cognitive-perceptual screening completed for neurological diagnoses
  • [ ] Adaptive equipment recommendations specific with clinical justification
  • [ ] Home environment barriers and modifications identified
  • [ ] Findings linked to occupational performance deficits (not impairments alone)
  • [ ] Goals are occupation-based (e.g., "independent donning of sock with sock aid" not "improve hip flexion")
  • [ ] Discharge disposition factors identified (supervision needs, equipment, home setup)
  • [ ] Documentation structured per OTPF-4 framework

Quality Audit

  • [ ] Occupational profile captures roles, routines, priorities, and contexts
  • [ ] ADL scoring uses standardized scale (FIM, Barthel, or documented assist levels)
  • [ ] UE assessment uses at least one standardized instrument (NHPT, Box and Block, ARAT, DASH)
  • [ ] Cognitive assessment appropriate for diagnosis (ACLS for dementia, EFPT for stroke executive dysfunction)
  • [ ] Perceptual testing completed for all stroke and TBI patients
  • [ ] Adaptive equipment recommendations include product, purpose, and clinical justification
  • [ ] All [VERIFY] flags resolved or escalated
  • [ ] OT evaluation is distinct from PT evaluation (no duplicated testing without justification)
  • [ ] Documentation supports medical necessity for skilled OT services
  • [ ] Report signed with OT credentials (OTR/L, COTA/L supervision documented if applicable)

Guidelines

  • OT assessment is occupation-based — always frame findings in terms of ability to perform meaningful daily activities
  • Use the OTPF-4 as the organizing framework: occupational profile, analysis of occupational performance, intervention, outcomes
  • Observe ADL performance whenever possible; self-report alone is insufficient for scoring functional independence
  • OT and PT evaluations should complement, not duplicate — coordinate testing to avoid redundancy
  • For IRF patients, OT is expected to contribute to the minimum 3 hours/day rehabilitation requirement
  • Cognitive-perceptual assessment is a core OT competency — do not defer to neuropsychology for functional cognition screening
  • Adaptive equipment recommendations must be medically justified and tied to specific functional deficits — payers deny equipment without documentation
  • The Allen Cognitive Level provides direct guidance for supervision needs and discharge safety
  • Home assessment (in-person or via telehealth/interview) is essential before discharge for all patients going home
  • For work rehabilitation, coordinate with vocational rehabilitation and use job-specific task analysis per DOL physical demand classifications