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Dave Mellick, MA, Craig Hospital at

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Citation
Mellick, D. (2000). The Craig Handicap Assessment and Reporting Technique - Short Form. The Center for Outcome Measurement in Brain Injury. http://www.tbims.org/
combi/chartsf ( accessed ).*

*Note: This citation is for the COMBI web material. Mr. Mellick is not the scale author for the CHART-SF.

 

 

 

 

CHART-SF Syllabus

Administration Guidelines

1. The instrument was designed to be administered by interview, either in person or by telephone. It is possible to use the instrument as a mailed or self-administered questionnaire, although some valuable data potentially would be lost in the absence of interaction with an interviewer providing consistent prompts.

2. It takes approximately 7-8 minutes to administer.

3. It can be administered to a proxy in the absence of the primary respondent.

4. It can be used with individuals having a range of physical or cognitive impairments.

5. There is no set time period for administering the CHART SF; however, it is recommended that multiple measurements be taken over the course of a person's lifetime to assess changes with adaptation to the disability and to gain insight into changes in handicap which may occur over time.

Scoring Overview

Each of the domains or subscales of the CHART SF have a maximum score of 100 points, which is considered at the level of performance typical of the average non-disabled person. Achieving the maximum score indicates that roles within the domain are fulfilled at a level equivalent to that of the norm: able-bodied person. Subscale scores have routinely been added together to obtain a CHART SF total score, reflecting overall handicap level. High subscale and total scores (100 and 500, respectively) indicate less handicap, or higher social and community participation.

A major asset of the CHART SF is that, like CHART, it produces an index of handicap. There are a number of ways for a person with a disability to demonstrate the absence of handicap, and the scoring procedures of the CHART SF give credit to these various behaviors. However, the instrument is designed to measure handicap, not to identify the characteristics shared by 'super-achievers.' Therefore, although it is possible to score more than 100 on most of the sub-scales, a maximum of 100 points has been allowed, as a score of 100 would indicate no handicap in that dimension.

Factors Influencing CHART SF Scores

There are a variety of pre-morbid or post-rehabilitation factors that might explain CHART SF scores which deviate from the scores of other persons with similar impairments and disabilities. It has been suggested in the literature that certain pre-morbid behaviors, attitudes, and prior life experiences have been found to be correlates of successful rehabilitation outcomes. In addition to pre-existing individual characteristics, post-rehabilitation constraints and limitations may influence CHART SF scores. These factors include such things as family interference, alcohol or drug use, and awareness of vocational options. While CHART SF does not isolate any of these causes, it measures the combined consequences to the individual from these various factors.

CHART SF Scoring Guidelines and Instructions

The following guidelines provide detailed instructions on how to compute each CHART SF dimension score and the total CHART SF score. It is very simple to calculate these scores manually; however, you may choose to utilize your own computerized data analysis systems. Following the description of the scoring procedures, a series of suggestions and conventions are listed to assist in the interpretation and coding of responses from the CHART SF.

Scoring guidelines and instructions are available as a document in Adobe's Portable Document Format (PDF).
CHART SF scoring. (15k)

(What is PDF and How do I use PDF Files?)

 

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