Valorar La Funcionalidad en Sedestación - FIRST
Valorar La Funcionalidad en Sedestación - FIRST
Valorar La Funcionalidad en Sedestación - FIRST
Movimientos lentos
safety in a seated position. Thank you to the Department of Physical Therapy and
Information Techonology Services at SMU for hosting this training on their website.
This online module consists of an overview of the FIST, specifics related to each of the
14 FIST items, and documentation information. All FIST items have video examples
showing different levels of performance. There is a brief quiz to assess competency
available after you complete this tutorial.
First, some general information about the FIST.
What is the FIST?
Focus interventions
Impulsiveness
Slow movement
Patients who may benefit from other types of balance testing include:
ambulate
Please see the paper published in the Journal of Neurologic Physical Therapy detailing
the development and validation of the FIST for more details, or view the abstract at
PubMed.
Psychometrics of the FIST
FIST reliability
o
Note the patient is on a normal hospital bed without a mattress overlay and the bed is
fully flattened. The patient's feet are flat on the floor, with the hips and knees at
approximately 90 degrees of flexion. You should use a step or stool to position the
lower extremities and feet if the patient is shorter. The hips are positioned so that hip
rotation is neutral and they are not in hip abduction or adduction. The patient's hands
are in the lap.
Position yourself:
Therapist positioning is determined by patient safety requirements to guard the patient
appropriately and to allow the therapist to provide physical assistance to the patient
should they need it during testing. Common positions for the therapist include sitting in
front of the patient or to the side of the patient. The therapist can move between these
positions as needed during testing.
The patient should perform items with their best posture and
balance, and while moving in a seated position
The therapist will give them occasional light pushes to test for
balance reactions
The therapist will make sure they won't lose their balance
The patient should try not to use their hands, but they can if they
must
The therapist will remind the patient to try to not use their hands
Breaks are allowed-if the patient needs one, they should tell the
therapist
The therapist should ask the patient if they have questions, and
answer them before proceeding
Now you should be able to set up FIST testing, including what equipment is required,
patient positioning, therapist positioning, and general FIST description to use when
testing.
FIST Scoring
The scoring criteria on the FIST are the same for each item. The FIST was designed
this way to make learning and using the scoring scale easy and to decrease the need to
constantly refer to written directions when scoring each item. The items are scored on a
5 point ordinal scale ranging from 0 to 4, with 0 representing the lowest ability and 4
representing normal ability.
0 Dependent
1 Needs assistance
2 Upper extremity support
3 Verbal cues/increased time
4 Independent
Let's take a look at each point on the scale.
0 Dependent: Patient requires complete physical assistance to perform task
successfully, patient is unable to complete task successfully even with physical
assistance, or dependent
2 Upper Extremity Support: If the patient requires the use of one or both of their
upper extremities to support themselves or to maintain their balance during the
performance of the task, they score a 2. Items involving grasping or picking up items
should be scored a 2 if the patient uses their upper extremity for support or balance, not
as a score of how they pick up the item. Items that involve a movement and require the
patient return to the starting position should be scored a 2 if the patient requires the use
of their hands for any part of the task. You may prompt the patient to try again without
using their hands to see if they are able to successfully complete the task without their
hands.
3 Verbal Cues/ Increased Time: A score of 3 indicates the patient required verbal
cueing or an increased amount of time to complete the task. Otherwise, their
performance was complete and they successfully completed the task. If a patient is
unsafe but can otherwise complete the task, and providing verbal cueing would improve
safety (i.e.,"slow down"), the patient is scored as a 3.
4 Independent: 4 is the highest score attainable for any individual item and represents
performance that is normal. It also accounts for speed and safety.
Now you should be familiar with the scoring scale used for all the FIST items.
Aside from the 3 nudge items, these items are ordered by difficulty,
so have the patient perform them in order.
The following pages review each individual test item, and include:
maximum score of 4
either 0, 1, 2, or 3
Nudges
Description & Directions
The nudge items are intended to examine the patient's ability to react to an unknown
disruption of their balance. Therefore it is important that you do not tell the patient
immediately before the nudge and that you nudge them only once. This will accurately
allow you to see how an unknown balance perturbation affects the patient's ability to
maintain their sitting balance.
During your general FIST directions and explanation you should have stated that you
will occasionally lightly push the patient during the test in a variety of directions
without warning to see how well they react. At that time be sure to reinforce that you
will be present to ensure they do not lose their balance. You should not tell the patient
immediately before you nudge them; rather the directions for the nudges are embedded
in the general FIST description given before testing occurs.
Three nudges are included in the FIST: an anterior nudge, a posterior nudge, and a
lateral nudge on the dominant or stronger side. These nudges should be randomly
inserted during the FIST by the therapist so they will be unexpected by the patient.
Nudge Locations
Scoring Nudges
Sco
Description
re
Selected Example
Independent
Normal performance
Verbal
cues/increased
time
Needs assistance
Dependent
How hard do I nudge someone? You only want to displace the patient
enough to generate a balance reaction. You may have to practice on
a variety of 'normal' persons (family, colleagues) to get an idea of
how much pressure is required to generate a balance reaction.