Abstract

BackgroundAs one ages, physical, cognitive, and clinical problems accumulate and the pattern of loss follows a distinct progression. The first areas requiring outside support are the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living and over time there is a need for support in performing the Activities of Daily Living. Two new functional hierarchies are presented, an IADL hierarchical capacity scale and a combination scale integrating both IADL and ADL hierarchies.MethodsA secondary analyses of data from a cross-national sample of community residing persons was conducted using 762,023 interRAI assessments. The development of the new IADL Hierarchy and a new IADL-ADL combined scale proceeded through a series of interrelated steps first examining individual IADL and ADL item scores among persons receiving home care and those living independently without services. A factor analysis demonstrated the overall continuity across the IADL-ADL continuum. Evidence of the validity of the scales was explored with associative analyses of factors such as a cross-country distributional analysis for persons in home care programs, a count of functional problems across the categories of the hierarchy, an assessment of the hours of informal and formal care received each week by persons in the different categories of the hierarchy, and finally, evaluation of the relationship between cognitive status and the hierarchical IADL-ADL assignments.ResultsUsing items from interRAI’s suite of assessment instruments, two new functional scales were developed, the interRAI IADL Hierarchy Scale and the interRAI IADL-ADL Functional Hierarchy Scale. The IADL Hierarchy Scale consisted of 5 items, meal preparation, housework, shopping, finances and medications. The interRAI IADL-ADL Functional Hierarchy Scale was created through an amalgamation of the ADL Hierarchy (developed previously) and IADL Hierarchy Scales. These scales cover the spectrum of IADL and ADL challenges faced by persons in the community.ConclusionsAn integrated IADL and ADL functional assessment tool is valuable. The loss in these areas follows a general hierarchical pattern and with the interRAI IADL-ADL Functional Hierarchy Scale, this progression can be reliably and validly assessed. Used across settings within the health continuum, it allows for monitoring of individuals from relative independence through episodes of care.

Highlights

  • As one ages, physical, cognitive, and clinical problems accumulate and the pattern of loss follows a distinct progression

  • Cognitive, and clinical problems accumulate over time and tasks that once could be done without the help of others become challenging or impossible to perform

  • A variety of functional items and summary scales exist for providing the context to describe this movement from independence to full dependency [1,2,3,4,5,6]. One such set of functional items created by the international interRAI non-profit consortium is included in its multi-setting suite of assessment instruments [7,8]

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Summary

Introduction

Physical, cognitive, and clinical problems accumulate and the pattern of loss follows a distinct progression. The first areas requiring outside support are the Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs), for example, cooking, this movement from independence to full dependency [1,2,3,4,5,6]. One such set of functional items created by the international interRAI non-profit consortium is included in its multi-setting suite of assessment instruments [7,8]. This set of instruments is in wide use across the world, mandated in many instances by local, state, and national governments

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