Initial Physiotherapy Assessment and Consent Form

Form Filling, Clinical Assessment, and Consent Guidance for Physiotherapists

Purpose of the Form

The Initial Physiotherapy Assessment and Consent Form serves a dual function:

  1. Clinical assessment document – to record comprehensive subjective and objective findings, establish diagnoses, plan care, and ensure patient safety.
  2. Legal and ethical consent document – to obtain free, informed, and voluntary consent for physiotherapy treatment in compliance with ethical, professional, and medico-legal standards.

This form is intended for all physiotherapy patients, irrespective of specialty (musculoskeletal, neurological, cardiopulmonary, oncological, women’s health, etc.).


Patient Identification and Administrative Details

How to Fill

Record clearly:

  • Patient name
  • UHID number
  • Age and sex
  • Consultation date
  • Referring clinician
  • Occupation

Clinical Guidance

Occupation provides insight into physical demands, ergonomic risks, and return-to-work goals. Referral source helps align physiotherapy goals with medical management.


SUBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT

The subjective assessment captures the patient’s narrative, symptoms, functional impact, and relevant medical background.


Presenting Complaints

How to assess
Ask the patient to describe their main problems in their own words.

How to fill
List primary symptoms (e.g., pain, stiffness, weakness, breathlessness, imbalance).

Clinical interpretation
This section establishes patient priorities and frames goal setting.


History of Presenting Complaints (H/O)

How to assess
Clarify onset, duration, progression, and mechanism.

How to fill
Document timeline and key events concisely.

Clinical interpretation
Sudden onset suggests trauma or acute pathology; gradual onset suggests degenerative, postural, or systemic causes.


Functional Limitations

How to assess
Explore difficulties in daily life.

How to fill
Describe limitations in ADLs, work, mobility, self-care, or participation.

Clinical interpretation
Functional limitations guide outcome measure selection and goal formulation.


Medical History

How to assess
Review patient report and available medical records.

How to fill
Tick all applicable conditions and specify “Any Other” when needed.

Clinical interpretation
Comorbidities influence safety, exercise tolerance, modality selection, and precautions.


Pain Assessment

How to assess
Use NPRS (0–10) and qualitative questioning.

How to fill

  • Record NPRS score
  • Document pain location
  • List aggravating and relieving factors

Clinical interpretation
Mechanical pain patterns differ from inflammatory or neuropathic presentations and affect treatment strategy.


Medication Use and Allergy / Intolerance

How to assess
Ask specifically about pain medications, anticoagulants, steroids, and chronic medications.

How to fill
List medications and note any allergies or intolerances.

Clinical interpretation
Medication profile affects bleeding risk, pain response, fatigue, and modality contraindications.


Investigations & Imaging Review

How to fill
Summarize relevant findings from X-rays, MRI, CT, lab reports, or medical notes.

Clinical interpretation
Physiotherapy decisions must align with imaging and medical findings but should not rely on imaging alone.


Safety Screening / Checklist

Purpose

This is a critical risk-screening section to identify contraindications, precautions, and situations requiring medical clearance.

How to Fill

Tick all applicable conditions across:

  • Reproductive status (pregnancy, menstruation)
  • Infection and systemic illness
  • Cardiovascular and respiratory conditions
  • Neurological disorders
  • Hematological and metabolic disorders
  • Skin integrity and sensation
  • Surgical and implant history
  • Treatment area–specific risks

Clinical Interpretation

  • Presence of red-flag or high-risk conditions may require:
    • Treatment modification
    • Deferral of therapy
    • Medical referral or clearance

This section is essential for patient safety and legal protection.


OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT – Examination Findings

This section documents clinically observed impairments.


Posture, Swelling, Sensation, Gait

How to assess
Observe static posture, movement, and gait.

How to fill
Tick normal/abnormal and specify details when abnormal.

Clinical interpretation
Postural and gait deviations often explain pain patterns and functional deficits.


Range of Motion (ROM)

How to assess
Assess active and passive ROM.

How to fill
Tick restricted if present and specify joint/movement.


Muscle Strength (MMT)

How to assess
Test key muscle groups relevant to the complaint.

How to fill
Tick reduced and specify muscles or grades.


Tenderness and Other Findings

How to fill
Describe location, severity, and type of tenderness or other notable findings.


Detail Specific Assessment Needed

How to fill
Tick the physiotherapy domain(s) requiring detailed assessment:

  • Musculoskeletal
  • Neurological
  • Cardiopulmonary
  • Oncological
  • Women’s Health
  • Vestibular
  • Dysphagia

Clinical interpretation
This determines which specialized assessment form or protocol should follow.


Diagnosis and Clinical Reasoning

Medical Diagnosis

How to fill
Record physician-diagnosed condition.


Functional Diagnosis

How to fill
Describe functional impact (e.g., “Reduced shoulder function affecting overhead activities”).

Clinical interpretation
Physiotherapy focuses primarily on functional diagnosis.


Problem List

How to fill
List key impairments and limitations (pain, ROM loss, weakness, balance deficit).


Rehabilitation Goals

How to fill
Define short- and long-term goals that are:

  • Functional
  • Measurable
  • Patient-centered

MDT Referral

How to Fill

Tick required referrals (orthopedic, neurology, gynecology, physician, pain specialist, others).

Clinical Interpretation

MDT referral ensures holistic care and timely escalation when physiotherapy alone is insufficient.


PLAN OF CARE

How to Fill

Document:

  • Proposed physiotherapy interventions
  • Frequency and duration
  • Precautions or contraindications
  • Home advice and follow-up instructions

Clinical Interpretation

Plan of care must be individualized, safe, and adaptable based on patient response.


CONSENT FOR PHYSIOTHERAPY TREATMENT

Purpose

This section establishes informed consent, fulfilling ethical and legal obligations.


How to Explain to the Patient

Ensure the patient understands:

  • Nature of physiotherapy treatment
  • Expected benefits
  • Possible adverse effects
  • Right to withdraw consent at any time
  • Their responsibilities during treatment

Explanation must be in a language understood by the patient.


How to Fill

  • Ensure patient (or legal guardian) signs only after understanding
  • Record date
  • Obtain guardian signature if applicable
  • Physiotherapist signs after explaining treatment

Declaration Section

Clinical and Legal Importance

Confirms that:

  • Information provided by the patient is accurate
  • Consent is voluntary
  • Patient agrees to follow the treatment plan

This section protects both patient rights and therapist accountability.


Assessor Authentication

How to Fill

Record:

  • Physiotherapist’s name
  • Signature

This establishes professional responsibility and medico-legal validity.


Clinical Summary

The Initial Physiotherapy Assessment and Consent Form is the foundation document for all physiotherapy care. Proper completion ensures:

  • Comprehensive clinical reasoning
  • Patient safety through systematic screening
  • Ethical, informed consent
  • Clear documentation for continuity of care
  • Legal protection for patient and therapist

Accurate, thorough, and honest completion of this form is essential for safe, effective, and professional physiotherapy practice

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