Paula Botero
Assessment Results
Client Name: Dick- Assessment (SLP)
Examination Date: March 31st, 2024
Mode: learning
Case History 91/100
Collaborators 95/100
Hypothesis ✓
Assessments 100/100
Skills Check 96/100
Diagnosis 91/100
Recommendations 100/100
Completion Time 2 Minutes
Your Competency Score 96%
Overall Competency Rating
Mastering Competency
Skills Check
Apples Test 100/100
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Clock Drawing Task 100/100
Indented Paragraph Task 100/100
Descriptive Writing Task 100/100
Montreal Protocol for the Evaluation of Communication (MEC) 96/100
Discourse Protocol from RHDBank 100/100
Oral Peripheral Exam 67/100
Communicative Item Participation Bank (CPIB) 100/100
Global Coherence Rating 100/100
Completed 9 of 9
Clipboard Contents
Case History
Reflective (+): 30
Acceptable (0): 2
Rejected (-): 1
Identifying / Family Information
4 minutes 46 seconds
Review the Case History Intake Form.
Enter notes in the clipboard after viewing the response.
4 minutes 52 seconds
Tell me about your family.
I met my wife at [muted]. We both worked there together, and we
got married in [muted]. We have three, three sons. Our oldest son
has two daughters. We have two granddaughters with, Joe's our
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oldest son. Jim is our youngest, and he has a grandson, and they
are expecting in early September.
4 minutes 56 seconds
Describe what a typical day looks like for you.
A typical day is, I wake up between six and seven. And Cindy gets
up and gets some coffee started. And I get, start getting out of bed
around seven-thirty. I do that and then get to the bathroom and
get to the kitchen table for breakfast and my morning pills. And
then before I go out to the table, I do an exercise regime that I do,
in bed mainly. I try to loosen things up. Then it seems like usually
after breakfast, I’ve got a therapy of some sort, or as the day goes
on, I like to watch some of the Westerns they have on television. I
do that, and then plus lately, I’ve been looking through some old
pictures we have and trying to get them separated into piles of
different parts of my life.
Areas of Concern
4 minutes 59 seconds
Why are you here today?
I’m here so you can find out a little more about me and about
people that have had right-sided strokes.
5 minutes 1 seconds
On your form, you indicated that you had a stroke about two years
ago. Will you tell me more about what happened that day?
Yeah, I was out hunting that day. And I talked to my wife about
going out for a few hours. So I ate a quick lunch and went, and I
was up in a tree stand, and I had real bad acid indigestion in the
middle of the afternoon. And I was deer hunting with a crossbow,
and I got coughing real bad with the acid indigestion, thinking that
it wasn’t going to work good for hunting. And a little while later, I
looked up and there was a deer in front of me somehow. And I
went to move the crossbow for a shot, and I didn’t realize it right
until then that I couldn’t really handle the crossbow, and I dropped
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it out of my elevated tree stand. And a little while later, I got
thinking I got to get down and see what happened to the
crossbow. I went to get up, and I couldn’t get up. On my feet, my
left leg was pretty much useless. My left hand was too. So I decided
in my own mind, I said, you know, if I get down out of here and get
on my feet, I can walk out of here somehow. So I got down on the
flooring of my stand and I got my right leg around and hanging on
with my right hand, I was able to get my right foot down on top of
the ladder. And I could push myself so that my right foot, I could go
down step-by-step on the ladder. Up to where I was sitting was
fifteen feet. So I came down a couple of steps, and when I went to
do it again and to make it work, I had to let go briefly with my right
hand and then get another hold. And one of the times I tried to do
that, I never got my grip again. And I fell backwards for, I figure
eight to ten feet. Luckily, I landed on my back. I guess that was the
lucky thing of the day. And I’d already talked with my two sons, and
they knew right where I was, and they knew my predicament. My
one son asked me, he says, “Have you had a stroke?” And I said, “I
don’t think so,” because I really didn’t know exactly what a stroke
would feel like. I never did feel it happen. And from what I
gathered from doctors, it’s not usually that people don’t exactly
feel exactly when it happens.
5 minutes 3 seconds
What difficulties have you had since your stroke?
I mean, I don’t process information real quick. I used to be real fast
with decisions and answering and talking, and it has slowed me
down some.
5 minutes 5 seconds
What progress have you made since you had your stroke?
My vision’s cleared up some. And I’m walking better. And I’m able
to, when I first got out of the hospital, I like to do Sudoku and word
searches. And that was tough for me to think my way through
them.
5 minutes 6 seconds
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