Standardization use of the international classification of functioning, disability and health in the determination of health status in patients with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.

Publication date: Feb 01, 2025

To propose a standardized method for the use of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) to describe the health status in Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome (PACS) and investigate interrater agreement in the linking process in instruments and clinical exams using the ICF categories. Cross-sectional and interrater agreement study that followed the Guidelines for Reporting Reliability and Agreement Studies. Two raters performed the linking coding process in instruments of quality of life, anxiety and depression, fatigue and pulmonary function, inspiratory muscle strength and cardiopulmonary exercise testing. The codes were qualified by standards defined to each instrument and exams. The instrument with the lowest Cohen’s Kappa coefficient was anxiety and depression (k = 0. 57). Forty ICF codes were linked to clinical instruments and exams. The fatigue instrument presented a higher degree of disability by the qualification process, from severe to complete, in the linked codes. The study presents a standardized method for the assessment of the health status of patients with PACS through ICF. Restriction in work performance, socialization and family relationships as well as disabilities in physical endurance, fatigue and exercise tolerance were found in the sample. The agreement between the raters was moderate to perfect, demonstrating that the method can be reproducible.

Concepts Keywords
Cardiopulmonary Adult
Covid COVID-19
Exams Cross-Sectional Studies
Fatigue Disability Evaluation
Standardization disability evaluation
Fatigue
Female
Health Status
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Persons with Disabilities
Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome
Post-Acute COVID-19 syndrome
psychosocial functioning
Quality of Life
rehabilitation
Reproducibility of Results
SARS-CoV-2

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH health status
disease MESH post-acute COVID-19 syndrome
disease IDO process
disease IDO quality
disease MESH anxiety
disease MESH depression
disease MESH work performance
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH psychosocial functioning

Original Article

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