Contact Corwin
Boake, PhD, The Institute for Rehabilitation Research at
Citation Boake, C. (2001). The
Supervision RatingScale. The Center for Outcome Measurement
in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/
combi/srs ( accessed
).
Introduction
to the Supervision Rating Scale
The
Supervision Rating (SRS) measures the level of supervision that
a patient/subject receives from caregivers. The SRS rates level
of supervision on a 13-point ordinal scale that can optionally be
grouped into five ranked categories (Independent, Overnight Supervision,
Part-Time Supervision, Full-Time Indirect Supervision, and Full-Time
Direct Supervision). The SRS was designed to be rated by a clinician
based on interviews with the subject and an informant who has observed
at first hand the level of supervision received by the subject.
Scoring is a one step procedure in which the clinician assigns the
rating that is closest to the subject's level. Ratings are based
on the level of supervision received, not on how much supervision
a subject is judged or predicted to need.
Information
regarding the SRS was contributed by The
Institute for Rehabilitation Research. Please contact Corwin
Boake, Ph.D., at
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for more
information.
If
you find the information in the COMBI useful, please mention it
when citing sources of information. The information on the SRS may
be cited as:
Boake, C. (2000). The Supervision Rating Scale. The Center for
Outcome Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/combi/srs
( accessed
).