Figure 4: Percentage of questionnaire agreement.
4 DISCUSSIONS
A questionnaire including 14 questions revealed the
first use of the ICF concept for making a problem
framework in a geriatric patient by PMR resident.
All of the respondents (100%) agree that the ICF
concept improves integrating, understanding, and
analytical skills in a geriatric problem. Respondent
agrees that using a framework based on the ICF
concept makes them more understanding of how to
analyze the problem found from CGA, so its easier
to defining rehabilitation targets and priority
problems in geriatric patients. The using of ICF
concept in a process to make a problem framework
in geriatric patient simplify communication with
other colleagues and patients, to communicate what
is need to support rehabilitation process to solve a
problem found in a geriatric patient. On the other
hand, 4 respondents (28,5%) reveal the using of the
ICF concept takes more time in the process to make
the framework compare to their usual approach.
However this is their first time implementing an ICF
concept to make a geriatric problem framework, so it
needs habituation in applying the ICF concept to
make a problem framework. We also revealed that 5
respondent showed that using an ICF concept make
a difficulty in writing of framework (35,7%). They
find a difficulty to recognize what problems should
be placed first of the many problems found from
CGA, but due to time, they admit that using the ICF
concept getting easier for them because of the
habituation process.
There is 12 respondent from 14 respondent
(85,7%) agree that it facilitates in making functional
diagnosis and prognosis, only 2 of 14 respondents
said an ICF concept did not support and make no
differences in deciding for diagnosis and prognosis
in geriatric patients compared to their usual
methods. Considering to make a functional diagnosis
and prognosis is important learning material for
PMR residents, this shows that along with the higher
frequency of contact with patients, PMR residents
will be more capable to make a functional diagnosis
and patient prognosis. Unlike the rehabilitation
programs, target and priority, which can find from
more sources, skills to set up prognosis and
functional diagnosis develop as the time they spend
with patient and habituation using the ICF concept.
Studies show that diagnosis alone does not
predict service needs, length of hospitalization, level
of care or functional outcomes. Nor is the presence
of a disease or disorder an accurate predictor of
receipt of disability benefits, work performance,
return to work potential or likelihood of social
integration. This means that if we use a medical
classification of diagnoses alone we will not have
the information we need for health planning and
management purposes. ICF makes it possible to
collect those vital data in a consistent and
internationally comparable manner. For basic public
health purposes, including determining the overall
health of populations, the prevalence, and incidence
of non-fatal health outcomes, and to measure health
care needs and the performance and effectiveness of
health care systems, we need reliable and
comparable data on the health of individuals and
populations. ICF provides the framework and
classification system for these purposes. With using
an ICF concept there is an increased recognition
among social planners and service agencies that
reductions in the incidence and severity of disability
in a population can be brought about both by
enhancing the functional capacity of the person and
by improving performance by modifying features of
the social and physical environment. ICF allows
analyzing the impact of these different interventions,
classifying domains of areas of life as well as the
environmental factors that improve performance
especially in the geriatric population ( WHO, 2002).
ICF is an essential basis for the standardization
of data concerning all aspects of human functioning
and disability around the world to evaluate health
care settings that deal with chronic illness and
disability, such as rehabilitation centers, nursing
homes, psychiatric institutions, and community
services. ICF is useful for persons with all forms of
disabilities, not only for identifying their health care
and rehabilitative needs but also in identifying and
measuring the effect of the physical and social
environment on the disadvantages that they
experience in their lives. From the viewpoint of
health economics, ICF will help monitor and explain
health care and other disability costs. Measuring
functioning and disabilities will make it possible to