Learning Disability Questionnaire

This questionnaire is used to measure change in a person’s mental health, well- being and social functioning and is a vital step of patient’s annual health check review. There are 18 items on the questionnaire. Please assess them on a scale from 0 to 4 covering the period since April 2020.

Learning Disability Questionnaire

Learning Disability Questionnaire

Behavioural problems directed at others

Include behaviour that is directed to other persons. Do not include behaviour that is directed towards self or primarily at property or other behaviours. Rate risk as it is currently perceived.

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Behavioural problems directed towards self

Include all forms of self-injurious behaviour. Do not include behaviour directed towards others, or behaviour primarily directed at property, or other behaviours.

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Other mental / behavioural problems

Do not include behaviour directed towards others, or self-injurious behaviour. Rate the most prominent behaviours present. Include: A, behaviour destructive to property; B, problems with personal behaviours, for example, spitting, smearing, eating rubbish, self-induced vomiting, continuous eating or drinking, hoarding rubbish, inappropriate sexual behaviour; C, rocking, stereotyped and ritualistic behaviour; D, anxiety, phobias, obsessive or compulsive behaviour; E, others.

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Attention / concentration

Include problems that may arise from underactivity, overactive behaviour, restlessness, fidgeting or inattention, hyperkinesis or arising from drugs.

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Memory / orientation

Include recent memory loss and worsening of orientation for time, place and person in addition to previous difficulties.

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Communication (problems with understanding)

Include all types of responses to verbal, gestural and signed communication, supported if necessary with environmental cues.

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Communication (problems with expression)

Include all attempts to make needs known and communicate with others (words, gestures, signs).

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Hallucinations / delusions

Include hallucinations and delusions irrespective of diagnosis. Include all manifestations suggestive of hallucinations and delusions (responding to abnormal experiences, e.g. invisible voices when alone).

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Problems with mood changes

Include problems associated with low mood states, elated mood states, mixed moods and mood swings (alternating between unhappiness, weeping and withdrawal on one hand and excitability and irritability on the other).

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Problems with sleeping

Include daytime drowsiness, duration of sleep, frequency of waking and diurnal variation of sleep pattern.

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Problems with eating / drinking

Include both increase and decrease in weight.

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Physical problems

Include illnesses from any cause that adversely affects mobility, self-care, vision and hearing (e.g. dementia, thyroid dysfunction, tremor affecting dexterity). Do not include relatively stable physical disability (e.g. cerebral palsy, hemiplegia).

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Seizures

Include all types of fits (partial, focal, generalised, mixed, etc.) to rate the short-term effect on the individual's daily life. Rate the effects of the fits. Do not include behavioural problems caused by, or associated with, fits.

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Activities of daily living at home

Include such skills as cooking, cleaning and other household tasks. Do not rate problems with daily living outside the home. Do not rate problems with self-care. Rate what is seen regardless of cause, for example, disability, motivation etc. Rate performance not potential. Rate the current level achieved with the existing support.

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Activities of daily living outside the home

Include skills such as budgeting, shopping, mobility and the use of transport, etc. Do not include problems with activities of daily living at home. Do not rate problems with self-care. Rate the current level with the existing support.

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Level of self-care

Rate the overall level of functioning in activities of self-care such as eating, washing, dressing and toileting. Rate the current level achieved with the existing support. Rate appearance not motivation.

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Relationship problems

Include effects of problems with relationships with family, friends and carers (in residential and day/leisure settings). Measure what is occurring regardless of cause, for example, somebody who is known to have good relationships may still display problems.

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Occupation / activities

Rate the overall level of problems with quality of daytime environment. Take account of frequency and appropriateness of, and engagement with, daytime activities. Consider factors such as lack of qualified staff, equipment and appropriateness with regard to age and clinical condition. Do not rate problems with self-care.

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