Hesperian Health Guides
Chapter 4: Examining and Evaluating Children with Disabilities
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A child’s abilities are more important than her disabilities.
The aim of rehabilitation is to help the child to function better at home and in the community. So when you examine a child, try to relate all your observations to what the child can do, cannot do, and might be able to do.
What a child is and does depends partly on other persons. So we must also look at the child’s abilities and difficulties in relation to her home, her family, and her village or neighborhood.
To evaluate a child’s needs, try to answer these questions:
- What can the child do and not do? How does this compare with other children the same age in your community?
- What disabilities does the child have? How and when did they begin? Are they getting better, worse, or are they the same?
- In what ways are the child’s body, mind, senses, or behavior affected? How does each specific problem affect what she does?
- What secondary disabilities are developing? (Disabilities that result after and because of the original disability.)
- What is the home situation like? What are the resources and limitations within the family and community that may increase or hold back the child’s possibilities?
- In what way has the child adjusted to her disability, or learned to manage?
To find the answers to these questions, a health or rehabilitation worker needs to do 3 things:
- Observe the child carefully—including her interaction with the family and with other persons.
- Take a history. Ask the parents and child (if old enough) for all information they can provide. Obtain medical records if possible.
- Examine the child to find out how well and in what way different parts of her body and mind work, how developed they are, and how much they affect her strengths and weaknesses.
BE SURE TO LOOK AT THE WHOLE CHILD—NOT JUST THE DISABILITY
Observation of the child can begin from the first moment the health worker or rehabilitation worker sees the child and her family. It can begin in the waiting area of a village center, the home, or the street, and should continue through the history—taking, examination, and follow-up visits. Therefore, we do not discuss ‘observation’ separately, but include it with these other areas.
It is usually best to ask questions before beginning to examine the child—so that we have a better idea what to look for. Therefore, we will discuss history-taking and then examination. But first a word about keeping records.