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Friday, March 11, 2022

Functional Independence Measure FIM (adults) and WEE FIM (children) Ratings

With my students
Since I’ve been working with kids on wheelchairs I was curious to learn how the Functional Independence Measure is used with those students. Below is the link I used to make self-notes in case I need the reference. What’s more, I love the clarity and explanation I found there.

Thank you Physiopedia!

https://www.physio-pedia.com/home/

 The FIM  https://www.physio-pedia.com/Functional_Independence_Measure_(FIM)

The FIM uses the level of assistance an individual needs to grade functional status

  • from total independence
  • to total assistance.

FIM™ is comprised of 18 items, grouped into 2 subscales - motor and cognition.

The MOTOR Subscale includes:

  • Eating
  • Grooming
  • Bathing
  • Dressing, upper body
  • Dressing, lower body
  • Toileting
  • Bladder management
  • Bowel management
  • Transfers - bed/chair/wheelchair
  • Transfers - toilet
  • Transfers - bath/shower
  • Walk/wheelchair
  • Stairs

The COGNITION Subscale includes:

  • Comprehension
  • Expression
  • Social interaction
  • Problem-solving
  • Memory


FIM scores range from 1 to 7.

  • 1 = "total assistance with helper” to
  • 7 = "complete independence with no helper".
  • Scores falling below 6 require another person for supervision or assistance.

Tasks that are evaluated using the FIM include:

  • bowel and bladder control,
  • transfers,
  • locomotion,
  • communication,
  • social cognition as well as the

following six self-care activities:

  • Feeding
  • Grooming
  • Bathing
  • Upper Body Dressing
  • Lower Body Dressing
  • Toileting

The FIM measures what an individual can perform and not what that person could do under certain circumstances.

FIM Levels:

No Helper

  • 7. Complete Independence  (Timely, Safety)
  • 6. Modified Independence (Device)
Helper - Modified Dependence
  • 5. Supervision (Subject = 100%)
  • 4. Minimal Assistance (Subject = 75% or more)
  • 3. Moderate Assistance (Subject = 50% or more)
Helper - Complete Dependence
  • 2. Maximal Assistance (Subject = 25% or more)
  • Total Assistance or not Testable (Subject less than 25%)

The WeeFIM II® System, a pediatric version of the Functional Independence Measure™ (FIM) System; also provides a method to evaluate outcomes for pediatric rehabilitation programs.

The WeeFIM II System measures several metrics of functional ability including 

  • Self-care refers to how well a child can feed, groom, bathe, dress, and complete toileting tasks including the management of bowel and bladder.
  • Mobility refers to how well a child can transfer in/out of a chair or wheelchair, on/off a toilet, or in/out of a tub or shower. Mobility also includes a child's ability to walk, crawl, or use a wheelchair, and to go up/downstairs.
  • Cognition refers to how well a child understands information, expresses themselves, interacts with peers, solves daily problems, and recalls information.

With my students

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