As you age...
Issues in Aging
Evaluation
Interventions
Potpourri
100

“Nonsystemic musculoskeletal condition that includes the progressive deterioration of articular cartilage and its underlying bone.”

What is Osteoarthritis?

100

With age, changes in this body system may result in an increased risk of aspiration.

What is the respiratory system?

100

This screening tool requires the responder to: identify the week, year, and state; add and subtract via mental math; categorize animals; recall objects; and listen to a short story and answer questions.

What is the Saint Louis University Mental Status examination (SLUMS)?

100

Intervention strategies for this condition commonly includes the following adaptive equipment: reacher, LH sponge, sock aid, and LH shoehorn.

What is a THR/THA?

100

This theory was developed by early gerontologists. It views aging as a problematic, inevitable, global decline, in which aging individuals abandon their roles and activities and withdraw from society.

What is Disengagement Theory?

200

“Systemic autoimmune disease process that exhibits both articular and periarticular impairments that include, but are not limited to, joint pain and stiffness.”

What is Rheumatoid Arthritis?

200

With age, changes in this body system results in a decrease in lean body mass, a decrease in estrogen production, a decline in thyroid-stimulating hormone, and changes in pancreatic function.

What is the endocrine system?

200

This is a summary of a client's occupational history and experiences, patterns of daily living, interests, values, and needs.

What is an occupational profile?

200

This intervention strategy includes client education to "don the affected limb first, doff the affected limb last."

What is a hemi-dressing technique (or hemi-technique)?

200

This type of intervention includes devices and techniques to prepare the client for occupational performance; they should be used as part of a broader plan not used exclusively.

What are PAMs and mechanical modalities?

300

This is the loss of bone mineral density. Risk factors include age, inactivity, and having a slight build. Women are more likely than men to experience it.

What is osteoporosis?

300

This condition may result in lifestyle changes that lead to dehydration. It may also cause fear (of embarrassment), decreased social participation, and an increased risk of falls.

What is Urinary Incontinence?

300

If you were assessing this, you would measure ROM, strength, endurance, cognition, and orientation; you would also identify the values and beliefs.

What are client factors?

300

This intervention strategy includes prioritizing what needs to be done now and what can wait until later, alternating heavy and light tasks, pacing ones activities, taking breaks, and using AE.

What is energy conservation?

300

This describes the central concepts that ground OT practice and builds a common understanding of the basic tenets and vision of the profession.

What is the OTPF-4?

400

This peaks in your 20s. Its decline may be related to "use it or lose it" or genetics. Women experience a greater loss in this than men. Its decline may contribute to an increased risk of falls.

What is strength (muscle strength)?

400

This can result in dry mouth, taste alteration, diminished bone health, tissue overgrowth, swelling, inflammation, and/or ulceration.

What is medication side effects?

400

As part of an evaluation, an OT would consider "the background of a person's life and living and ... the unique features of the person that are not part of a health condition or health state".

What is/are personal factors (personal context)?

400

This intervention strategy includes using larger joints rather than smaller joints, limiting activities that cause pain, taking breaks/resting, avoiding staying in one position for a prolonged period of time.

What are joint protection techniques/strategies?

400

Synthesizing information from the occupational profile to determine specific occupations and contexts that need to be addressed is part of this.

What is, analysis of occupational performance?

500

The primary risk factors for this are decreased bone strength and/or occurrence of fall-related trauma. Other risk factors include osteoporosis, decreased muscle volume, and decreased neuromuscular responses to physical challenges.

What is a (hip) fracture?

500

Improving this can improve metabolic control in individuals with diabetes, reduce cardiovascular disease, and in individuals in long-term care settings, prevent respiratory infections and even death.

What is oral hygiene?

500

This assessment serves as an indicator for what a person does, not what he or she could do. It assesses a person in the following areas: feeding, bathing, grooming, dressing, bowels, bladder, toilet use, transfers, mobility (on level surfaces), and (mobility on) stairs.

What is The Barthel Index?

500

This intervention strategy could include physical, visual, or verbal, or include gestures and/or models/demonstrations.

What is a prompt (or cue)?

500

Developing a plan which involves selecting objective and measurable occupation-based goals, approaches such as create, establish, or modify, as well as selecting the method for service delivery, are all part of this.

What is intervention (or the intervention process)?