Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Primary |
Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) |
The Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM) is designed to be used for client-centred clinical practice. The COPM is an outcome measure designed for use by occupational therapists to assess client outcomes in the areas of self-care, productivity and leisure. Using a semi-structured interview, the COPM is a five step process which measures individual, client-identified problem areas in daily function. Two scores, for performance and satisfaction with performance are obtained. |
In the first week and the sixth week |
|
Primary |
Quality of Life Questionnaire for Children (Kid-KINDL) |
The Kid-KINDL questionnaire contains 6 dimensions (viz, physical well-being, emotional well-being, self-esteem, friends, family, and school), each of them including 4 items. Each item in the test is 5-point Likert-scaled (positively worded items: never scores 1 and always scores 5; negatively worded items: never scores 5 and always scores 1). 7 From the item scores, the total Kid-KINDL score and each dimension score can be calculated and transformed into a 0 to 100 result. |
In the first week and the sixth week |
|
Primary |
The Child and Adolescent Scale of Participation (CASP) |
The CASP specifically measures children's extent of participation and restrictions in home, school and community life situations and activities compared to same-age peers as reported by family caregivers. It consists of 20 items divided into four sub-sections: (1) Home Participation, (2) School Participation, (3) Community Participation and (4) Home and Community Living Activities. Each item addresses a broad participation domain with examples provided for each domain (see Appendix for item descriptions). The 20 items are rated on a 4-point scale (4 = Age expected, 3 = Somewhat restricted, 2 = Very restricted, 1 = Unable) or as 'Not applicable'. |
In the first week and the sixth week |
|
Primary |
Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI) |
The Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory (PEDI) is a comprehensive functional assessment designed for use by physical and occupational therapists, as well as other rehabilitation and educational professionals. The PEDI measures both functional performance and capability in three domains: (1) self-care, (2) mobility, and (3) social function. The PEDI consists of 197 functional skill items, and 20 items that assess caregiver assistance and modifications. |
In the first week and the sixth week |
|
Primary |
Assistance to Participate Scale (APS) |
Assistance to Participate Scale (APS) measures the level of assistance that a school-aged child with a disability needs to participate in game, leisure, and recreational activities at home and in the community, from the perspective of the primary caregiver. It takes 5-10 min to answer the APS by the caregivers. Participants were asked to rate the level of assistance that they typically provide to their child on a 5-point ordinal scale (1 = Unable to participate; 2 = Participates with my assistance at all stages of the activity; 3 = Participates after I have set him/her up and help at times during the activity; 4 = Participates with my supervision only; 5 = Participates independently). The minimum and maximum scores range between 8 and 40. Lower scores indicate requirement of higher levels of assistance. |
In the first week and the sixth week |
|
Primary |
Sociodemographic Questionnaire |
Data on gender, age, height, weight, dominant hand, school class, medicine names used before will be collected. |
In the first week |
|