Correct
A. Head injury from MVA
Rancho levels of cognitive functioning:
1. No response = total assistance – not even response to pain
2. Generalized response = total assistance – general response to pain, gross body movements, vocalizations, response may be delayed
3. Localized response = total assistance – withdrawal from painful stimuli, turns towards sound, blinks at light, eyes follow objects, responds to family members – moving to music
4. Confused/agitated = maximal assistance – alert, tries to remove restraints, can sit, stand, walk; aggressive, mood swings, uncooperative, incoherent
5. Confused, inappropriate, non-agitated – maximal assistance – wanders around, non-oriented to person, time, place; brief periods of attention, poor memory/learning, can respond to simple commands, able to converse for brief periods – making a sandwich
6. Confused appropriate – moderate assistance – sometimes oriented to person, time, place; able to do tasks for 30 min in structured environment, slight remote memory, carryover of easy tasks, unaware of impairments, appropriate verbal responses – repetitive self-care
7. Automatic appropriate – minimal assistance for ADLs – oriented to person, time, place; 30+ min on task in familiar environment, carryover of new learning, awareness of the condition, can’t estimate consequences of their actions
8. Purposeful appropriate – standby assistance – has memory of past events, can do household and community work, leisure; depressed, irritable, argumentative, recognizes inappropriate social behavior
9. Purposeful appropriate: standby assistance on request – 2+ hours on task, can do work and leisure, aware of impairments, able to think about consequences, depression, irritable, self-monitors appropriately
10. Purposeful appropriate – modified independence – able to multitask, independently maintains memory, anticipates consequences, brief depression periods, socially appropriate, low frustration tolerance
Incorrect
A. Head injury from MVA
Rancho levels of cognitive functioning:
1. No response = total assistance – not even response to pain
2. Generalized response = total assistance – general response to pain, gross body movements, vocalizations, response may be delayed
3. Localized response = total assistance – withdrawal from painful stimuli, turns towards sound, blinks at light, eyes follow objects, responds to family members – moving to music
4. Confused/agitated = maximal assistance – alert, tries to remove restraints, can sit, stand, walk; aggressive, mood swings, uncooperative, incoherent
5. Confused, inappropriate, non-agitated – maximal assistance – wanders around, non-oriented to person, time, place; brief periods of attention, poor memory/learning, can respond to simple commands, able to converse for brief periods – making a sandwich
6. Confused appropriate – moderate assistance – sometimes oriented to person, time, place; able to do tasks for 30 min in structured environment, slight remote memory, carryover of easy tasks, unaware of impairments, appropriate verbal responses – repetitive self-care
7. Automatic appropriate – minimal assistance for ADLs – oriented to person, time, place; 30+ min on task in familiar environment, carryover of new learning, awareness of the condition, can’t estimate consequences of their actions
8. Purposeful appropriate – standby assistance – has memory of past events, can do household and community work, leisure; depressed, irritable, argumentative, recognizes inappropriate social behavior
9. Purposeful appropriate: standby assistance on request – 2+ hours on task, can do work and leisure, aware of impairments, able to think about consequences, depression, irritable, self-monitors appropriately
10. Purposeful appropriate – modified independence – able to multitask, independently maintains memory, anticipates consequences, brief depression periods, socially appropriate, low frustration tolerance