Rancho Los Amigos
The Ranchos Los Amigos (Revised) Cognitive
Scale is used by many health care teams to can begin treatment that will develop
skills and promote appropriate behavior. Health care professionals often suggest
the following simple measures to family and friends while the patient is still
in coma:
- Always talk as if the patient hears when you are nearby.
- Speak
directly to the patient about simple things and frequently reassure them.
- Explain
events and noises in the surrounding area. Tell the patient what has happened
and where they are.
- Touch and stroke the patient gently. Tell the patient
who you are each time you approach the bedside. Hold their hand.
- Play
the patient's favorite music for them.
- For parents of young children,
tape yourself singing or reading your child's favorite stories.
Levels
of Cognitive Functioning
Level I - No Response:
Total Assistance
- Complete absence of observable change in behavior
when presented visual, auditory, tactile, proprioceptive, vestibular or painful
stimuli.
Level II - Generalized Response: Total Assistance
-
Demonstrates generalized reflex response to painful stimuli.
- Responds
to repeated auditory stimuli with increased or decreased activity.
- Responds
to external stimuli with physiological changes generalized, gross body movement
and/or not purposeful vocalization.
- Responses noted above may be same
regardless of type and location of stimulation.
- Responses may be significantly
delayed.
Level III - Localized Response: Total Assistance
-
Demonstrates withdrawal or vocalization to painful stimuli.
- Turns toward
or away from auditory stimuli.
- Blinks when strong light crosses visual
field.
- Follows moving object passed within visual field.
- Responds
to discomfort by pulling tubes or restraints.
- Responds inconsistently
to simple commands.
- Responses directly related to type of stimulus.
-
May respond to some persons (especially family and friends) but not to others.
Level
IV - Confused/Agitated: Maximal Assistance
- Alert and in heightened
state of activity.
- Purposeful attempts to remove restraints or tubes
or crawl out of bed.
- May perform motor activities such as sitting, reaching
and walking but without any apparent purpose or upon another's request.
-
Very brief and usually non-purposeful moments of sustained alternatives and divided
attention.
- Absent short-term memory.
- May cry out or scream out
of proportion to stimulus even after its removal.
- May exhibit aggressive
or flight behavior.
- Mood may swing from euphoric to hostile with no apparent
relationship to environmental events.
- Unable to cooperate with treatment
efforts.
- Verbalizations are frequently incoherent and/or inappropriate
to activity or environment.
Level V - Confused, Inappropriate Non-Agitated:
Maximal Assistance
- Alert, not agitated but may wander randomly or
with a vague intention of going home.
- May become agitated in reponse
to external stimulation, and/or lack of environmental structure.
- Not
oriented to person, place or time.
- Frequent brief periods, non-purposeful
sustained attention.
- Severely impaired recent memory, with confusion
of past and present in reaction to ongoing activity.
- Absent goal directed,
problem solving, self-monitoring behavior.
- Often demonstrates inappropriate
use of objects without external direction.
- May be able to perform previously
learned tasks when structured and cues provided.
- Unable to learn new
information.
- Able to respond appropriately to simple commands fairly
consistently with external structures and cues.
- Responses to simple commands
without external structure are random and non-purposeful in relation to command.
-
Able to converse on a social, automatic level for brief periods of time when provided
external structure and cues.
- Verbalizations about present events become
inappropriate and confabulatory when external structure and cues are not provided.
Level
VI - Confused, Appropriate: Moderate Assistance
- Inconsistently oriented
to person, time and place.
- Able to attend to highly familiar tasks in
non-distracting environment for 30 minutes with moderate redirection.
-
Remote memory has more depth and detail than recent memory.
- Vague recognition
of some staff.
- Able to use assistive memory aide with maximum assistance.
-
Emerging awareness of appropriate response to self, family and basic needs.
-
Moderate assist to problem solve barriers to task completion.
- Supervised
for old learning (e.g. self care).
- Shows carry over for relearned familiar
tasks (e.g. self care).
- Maximum assistance for new learning with little
or nor carry over.
- Unaware of impairments, disabilities and safety risks.
-
Consistently follows simple directions.
- Verbal expressions are appropriate
in highly familiar and structured situations.
Level VII - Automatic,
Appropriate: Minimal Assistance for Daily Living Skills
- Consistently
oriented to person and place, within highly familiar environments. Moderate assistance
for orientation to time.
- Able to attend to highly familiar tasks in a
non-distraction environment for at least 30 minutes with minimal assist to complete
tasks.
- Minimal supervision for new learning.
- Demonstrates carry
over of new learning.
- Initiates and carries out steps to complete familiar
personal and household routine but has shallow recall of what he/she has been
doing.
- Able to monitor accuracy and completeness of each step in routine
personal and household ADLs and modify plan with minimal assistance.
-
Superficial awareness of his/her condition but unaware of specific impairments
and disabilities and the limits they place on his/her ability to safely, accurately
and completely carry out his/her household, community, work and leisure ADLs.
-
Minimal supervision for safety in routine home and community activities.
-
Unrealistic planning for the future.
- Unable to think about consequences
of a decision or action.
- Overestimates abilities.
- Unaware of
others' needs and feelings.
- Oppositional/uncooperative.
- Unable
to recognize inappropriate social interaction behavior.
Level VIII
- Purposeful, Appropriate: Stand-By Assistance
- Consistently oriented
to person, place and time.
- Independently attends to and completes familiar
tasks for 1 hour in distracting environments.
- Able to recall and integrate
past and recent events.
- Uses assistive memory devices to recall daily
schedule, "to do" lists and record critical information for later use with stand-by
assistance.
- Initiates and carries out steps to complete familiar personal,
household, community, work and leisure routines with stand-by assistance and can
modify the plan when needed with minimal assistance.
- Requires no assistance
once new tasks/activities are learned.
- Aware of and acknowledges impairments
and disabilities when they interfere with task completion but requires stand-by
assistance to take appropriate corrective action.
- Thinks about consequences
of a decision or action with minimal assistance.
- Overestimates or underestimates
abilities.
- Acknowledges others' needs and feelings and responds appropriately
with minimal assistance.
- Depressed.
- Irritable.
- Low
frustration tolerance/easily angered.
- Argumentative.
- Self-centered.
-
Uncharacteristically dependent/independent.
- Able to recognize and acknowledge
inappropriate social interaction behavior while it is occurring and takes corrective
action with minimal assistance.
Level IX - Purposeful, Appropriate:
Stand-By Assistance on Request
- Independently shifts back and forth
between tasks and completes them accurately for at least two consecutive hours.
-
Uses assistive memory devices to recall daily schedule, "to do" lists and record
critical information for later use with assistance when requested.
- Initiates
and carries out steps to complete familiar personal, household, work and leisure
tasks independently and unfamiliar personal, household, work and leisure tasks
with assistance when requested.
- Aware of and acknowledges impairments
and disabilities when they interfere with task completion and takes appropriate
corrective action but requires stand-by assist to anticipate a problem before
it occurs and take action to avoid it.
- Able to think about consequences
of decisions or actions with assistance when requested.
- Accurately estimates
abilities but requires stand-by assistance to adjust to task demands.
-
Acknowledges others' needs and feelings and responds appropriately with stand-by
assistance.
- Depression may continue.
- May be easily irritable.
-
May have low frustration tolerance.
- Able to self monitor appropriateness
of social interaction with stand-by assistance.
Level X - Purposeful,
Appropriate: Modified Independent
- Able to handle multiple tasks simultaneously
in all environments but may require periodic breaks.
- Able to independently
procure, create and maintain own assistive memory devices.
- Independently
initiates and carries out steps to complete familiar and unfamiliar personal,
household, community, work and leisure tasks but may require more than usual amount
of time and/or compensatory strategies to complete them.
- Anticipates
impact of impairments and disabilities on ability to complete daily living tasks
and takes action to avoid problems before they occur but may require more than
usual amount of time and/or compensatory strategies.
- Able to independently
think about consequences of decisions or actions but may require more than usual
amount of time and/or comepensatory strategies to select the appropriate decision
or action.
- Accurately estimates abilities and independently adjusts to
task demands.
- Able to recognize the needs and feelings of others and
automatically respond in appropriate manner.
- Periodic periods of depression
may occur.
- Irritability and low frustration tolerance when sick, fatigued
and/or under emotional stress.
- Social interaction behavior is consistently
appropriate.
See also:
Coma
Glasgow
Coma Scale
CDC - Assessing Outcomes in Children