By using this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies. To find out more visit our privacy policy.
Activity Measure for Post-Acute Care (AM-PAC) – "6 Clicks" Inpatient Short Forms
Summary
What it measures:
The Activity Measure for Post-Acute Care (AM-PAC) "6-Clicks" Inpatient Short Forms are multidimensional measures that use 6 questions to assess functional outcomes of patients in post-acute care settings. The original AM-PAC is used with a variety of diagnoses and patient populations to measure basic mobility (with and without a stair-climbing option), daily activity, and applied cognitive functions. The AM-PAC measures aspects such as difficulty, assistance, and limitations in activities of daily living. The "6-Clicks" short forms can be administered quickly to provide health care professionals with data to assist in predicting acute care hospital discharge destinations that can be entered into electronic medical records. The six questions on the inpatient short forms were selected from questions in the original AM-PAC.1,2
The basic mobility domain (short form) assesses difficulty or level of assistance needed with:
- Bed mobility.
- Sit to stand; stand to sit.
- Supine to sit.
- Seated transfers.
- Ambulation.
- Ascending stairs.
The daily activity domain (short form) assesses the level of assistance needed with1:
- Bathing.
- Clothing.
- Toileting.
- Eating.
- Grooming.
The applied cognitive domain (not measured with a short form) assesses difficulty or level of assistance needed with1:
- Understanding a presentation.
- Understanding familiar people.
- Remembering medications.
- Recalling where items were placed or put away.
- Remembering a list of items without writing them down.
- Managing complicated tasks.
Target Population:
Patients in acute care settings.
Members Only Content
Join APTA to get unlimited access to content including evidence-based research, guidance on payment changes, and other resources to help you thrive. Learn more about membership benefits.
Already a member? Log in
Date: November 30, 2017
Contact: practice@apta.org
Content Type: Test & Measure
You Might Also Like...
CPG
Physical Therapy Management of Congenital Muscular Torticollis: A 2024 Evidence-Based CPG (CPG+)Oct 1, 2024
This update of the 2018 guideline provides recommendations related to the treatment and management of patients with congenital muscular torticollis.
CPG
A Clinical Practice Guideline for Primary Care Physiotherapy in Patients With HaemophiliaJul 10, 2024
This guideline, developed by the University Medical Centre Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands, offers 82 consensus recommendations that are based on literature