SRS
Frequently Asked Questions
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- How
would you rate the SRS if the patient or significant other is
your only source of information?
- What
do you do if there are discrepancies between subjects and informants?
- Can
the SRS be abstracted from a medical chart?
- Can
the SRS be collected from a phone interview?
- How
would you rate an individual who is incarcerated?
- How
does the SRS rate an individual who needs full-time supervision
but can direct their own care?
- For
the SRS scale, does it matter why an individual needs supervision?
- How
do you rate instances where an individual is getting more supervision
than they need (ie an overprotective caregiver)?
- Are
there standard questions to ask? What other scales, if any, would
be helpful in determining the SRS score?
- How
do you rate someone who should be supervised during the day, but
isn't because no one is available?
- How
do you rate someone in barbituate coma? What if an individual
is placed in a barbituate coma so the treating staff doesn't have
to restrain him/her?
- What
if someone is living with someone else, but could live independently?
- Is
there a way to extrapolate cost information from this scale?
1.
How would you rate the SRS if the patient or significant other is
your only source of information?
Since
the SRS tries to measure the level of supervision actually received,
having only one source should not be a serious problem as long as
the source is reliable. One advantage of having both patient and
S.O. as sources is that it allows cross-checking. Even if only one
source is available, cross-checking is still possible if the SRS
rating is implied by the patient's living situation (e.g., the patient
is living independently). However, having only one source could
lead to an invalid SRS rating if the source is responding invalidly,
such as a patient or S.O. in denial or a S.O. who is not sufficiently
familiar with the patient's living situation. In these circumstances,
the rater should take routine steps to improve data quality, such
as contacting a S.O. who might be a better informant.
2.
What do you do if there are discrepancies between subjects and informants?
In
my experience, this occurs more often when sources report how much
supervision they think is needed, instead of reporting factually
how much supervision is received. It is important to emphasize to
sources that the rater is interested in factual information. Holding
joint and separate interviews with the subject and informat may
help. For example, if one source reports that the subject has been
alone overnight and the other source denies this ever happened,
the rater can ask about specific events (e.g., when was the last
time the subject was unsupervised overnight?) in order to decide
which report is true. Another technique is for the rater to ask
the source to report the level of supervision that the source feels
is needed and also the level of supervision that the source knows
is being received. Sometimes, asking for both reports helps the
source to distinguish between these two viewpoints.
3.
Can the SRS be abstracted from a medical chart?
SRS
ratings must be rated based on someone's direct observation of how
much supervision the individual receives. However, it is sometimes
possible to rate the SRS from records if the records indicate a
living situation that strongly implies a specific level of supervision.
For example, this is true if the records indicate that the patient
lives alone or independently, lives in a nursing home, or lives
in a facility in which the rater knows the level of supervision.
4.
Can the SRS be collected from a phone interview?
Yes.
5.
How would you rate an individual who is incarcerated?
If
the individual is incarcerated in a locked facility, the SRS rating
would generally be 11 (closed facility). It is possible that ratings
of 12 (1:1 supervision within a closed facility) and 13 (physical
restraints) would apply in some cases. Raters should be cautious
in using the SRS with individuals in minimum security facilities,
some of whom are allowed to travel unsupervised to jobs or on brief
passes.
6.
How does the SRS rate an individual who needs full-time supervision
but can direct their own care?
As
a general rule, the SRS rates only the frequency and intensity of
supervision being provided. The SRS does not take into account who
is responsible for providing the supervision. This should not create
a serious problem if the SRS is used with individuals with brain
injury, since in this population it is expected that relatively
few of those who receive full-time supervision would also be responsible
for directing this supervision. However, if the SRS were used with
individuals who do not have cognitive limitations (e.g., spinal
cord injury), it might be important to clarify that the scale was
being used to measure supervision only in the physical sense of
the term.
7.
For the SRS scale, does it matter why an individual needs supervision?
It
needs to be emphasized that the SRS rates how much supervision an
individual receives, and not why this is needed. An advantage of
this procedure is that level of supervision, as rated by the SRS,
should represent the cumulative impact of different impairments
and disabilities, in terms of the amount of help received directly
from other persons.
8.
How do you rate instances where an individual is getting more supervision
than they need (ie an overprotective caregiver)?
The
rater should follow standard procedure and rate the amount of supervision
that the individual actually receives, even if this is more than
needed. By following this procedure, the SRS should be sensitive
to reductions in the individual's supervision level that might,
for example, result if the individual moves to a less restrictive
living situation. If this procedure were violated, as would happen
if the rating was based on the amount of supervision that the rater
felt was needed by the individual, then the SRS might lose sensitivity
to change.
9.
Are there standard questions to ask? What other scales, if any,
would be helpful in determining the SRS score?
If
the SRS is administered as an interview, the simplest procedure
is for the rater to use the same question that appears in the written
instructions: How much time is someone else responsible for being
with the patient. If necessary, the rater can use the anchor statements
as additional questions (e.g., Does the person ever leave the home
alone? Does the person have someone else with him all the time?).
The
SRS was designed to be rated without the help of other scales. However,
if other scales that measure assistance or supervision in (e.g.,
FIM) are administered, then the information obtained may be usable
in rating the SRS, and vice versa. Therefore, it may be helpful
to administer these scales during the same part of the interview.
10.
How do you rate someone who should be supervised during the day,
but isn't because no one is available?
It
is important for the rater to follow standard procedure, which requires
the rater to rate the amount of supervision actually received by
the person, even if this is less than needed. In this circumstance,
the rater should ask whether the person is receiving indirect supervision,
for example being checked on occasionally by neighbors during the
day.
12.
How do you rate someone in barbituate coma? What if an individual
is placed in a barbituate coma so the treating staff doesn't have
to restrain him/her?
Normally,
this would be a patient in the intensive care unit (ICU) of a hospital,
which would correspond to a rating of 10 (full-time direct supervision).
Note that if physical restraints are used, as is often the case
in intubated patients, then the rating could be 13.
If
the individual is placed in a barbituate coma so that staff do not
have to restarain them, it would probably involve an ICU patient,
as in the previous example, and should correspond to a rating of
10.
13.
What if someone is living with someone else, but could live independently?
Again,
it needs to be emphasized that the SRS is rated based on the level
of supervision received and not on the amount that could be received
in a less restrictive setting, even if the less restrictive setting
would be more appropriate than the actual living situation.
14.
Is there a way to extrapolate cost information from this scale?
This
is an interesting possibility being studied at our center (TIRR).
For example, in the case of a person with brain injury who is receiving
supervision from family members, but without having to pay for it,
it might be possible to calculate what it would cost to reimburse
someone (e.g., personal attendant) for providing the same amount
of supervision time.
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