Structures TBI rehab with Rancho Los Amigos scoring and cognitive rehabilitation protocols. Use when managing TBI rehab, tracking Rancho levels, or implementing cognitive therapy.
Structures TBI rehabilitation using the Rancho Los Amigos Levels of Cognitive Functioning (RLAS), Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS), post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) tracking, and cognitive rehabilitation protocols. Covers the continuum from acute inpatient through post-acute community reintegration, addressing motor, cognitive, behavioral, and psychosocial recovery.
TBI rehabilitation is the most variable and prolonged rehabilitation diagnosis. Recovery trajectories range from weeks (mild TBI/concussion) to years (severe TBI), and cognitive deficits — not motor impairments — are the primary determinants of functional outcome and return to work/school. The Rancho Los Amigos scale guides intervention selection and environment design at each cognitive recovery stage. Post-traumatic amnesia duration is the strongest predictor of long-term outcome. Documentation must track cognitive recovery serially, justify the level of supervision required, and demonstrate that interventions are matched to cognitive stage. Payers challenge TBI rehabilitation length of stay and post-acute program costs; robust documentation of ongoing cognitive gains and functional progress is essential for continued authorization. This skill ensures stage-appropriate, evidence-based TBI rehabilitation documentation.
Before beginning TBI rehabilitation, confirm:
Required clinical questions:
Required documents:
TBI severity classification:
| Severity | GCS | LOC Duration | PTA Duration | Expected Outcome Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mild | 13-15 | <30 minutes | <24 hours | Most recover fully; 10-15% have persistent symptoms |
| Moderate | 9-12 | 30 min-24 hours | 1-7 days | Variable; most achieve independence with some deficits |
| Severe | 3-8 | >24 hours | >7 days | Prolonged rehab; many have lasting cognitive/functional impairments |
Post-traumatic amnesia (PTA) tracking:
PTA duration as prognostic indicator:
4 weeks: Very severe disability; prolonged rehabilitation required
RLAS Levels and rehabilitation approach:
| Level | Description | Rehabilitation Approach |
|---|---|---|
| I | No response | Sensory stimulation program; positioning; family education |
| II | Generalized response | Sensory stimulation with structured input; monitor for emerging responses |
| III | Localized response | Directed sensory stimulation; begin simple commands; track consistent responses |
| IV | Confused-agitated | Structured, low-stimulus environment; redirect rather than restrain; safety paramount; limit choices; short sessions |
| V | Confused-inappropriate, non-agitated | Structured routine; simple tasks with step-by-step direction; errorless learning; memory aids introduction |
| VI | Confused-appropriate | Supervised task completion; begin compensatory strategy training; community safety assessment |
| VII | Automatic-appropriate | Supervised to minimal assist for daily routine; executive function focus; structured community reintegration |
| VIII | Purposeful-appropriate (standby assist) | Independent in structured settings; impaired judgment in novel situations; vocational preparation |
| IX | Purposeful-appropriate (standby assist on request) | Independent most activities; uses compensatory strategies; social skills training |
| X | Purposeful-appropriate (modified independent) | May have residual subtle deficits; independent with self-monitoring; community integration complete |
Assessment frequency: Document RLAS level at admission, weekly (minimum), and with any significant change.
For RLAS IV (Confused-Agitated):
For RLAS V-VI (Confused):
For RLAS VII-VIII (Automatic to Purposeful):
For RLAS IX-X (Modified Independent):
Motor rehabilitation:
Behavioral management:
Psychosocial rehabilitation:
Outcome measures:
Discharge planning across the continuum:
Before finalizing TBI rehabilitation documentation: