Manual PMAL
Manual PMAL
Manual PMAL
written by:
Edward Taub, Angi Griffin,b, c Gitendra Uswattea
a
The PMAL is a structured interview intended to examine how often and how well a child
uses his/her involved upper extremity (UE) in their natural environment outside the therapeutic
setting. The child’s primary caregiver is asked standardized questions about the amount of use
of the child’s involved arm (How Often Scale or HO) and the quality of the child’s movement
during the functional activities specified in the instrument (How Well Scale or HW). These two
scales range from 0 to 10. The HO and HW scales are printed on separate sheets of paper and
are placed in front of the caregiver during test administrations. Caregivers should be told that
they can give half scores (i.e., 0.5, 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5) if this is reflective of their ratings.
During the first (pre-treatment) test administration, the test should be given by the
therapist after the therapist has had a period of time to observe a child’s behavior. The tester
should discuss the rating with the caregiver to develop the common frame of reference. The
frame of reference for each child should be their less affected UE. The therapist should verify
the response (e.g., “So, you rated that activity a ‘3’. However, your child moved his/her arm just
as well as the less affected arm. According to the frame of reference for this outcome measure
that would be scored more like a ‘5’. Do you agree?”). The final rating must be agreed to by the
caregiver. Establishing a common frame of reference for the rating scales during the pre-
treatment testing, before therapy has begun, is a critically important step. For suggestions on
how to accomplish this see Comments 3 and 4 at the end of this document. The pre-treatment
administration of the PMAL is very important and as much as an hour or even more if needed
should be devoted to it so that an appropriate frame of reference is established. During this test
use.
“The purpose of this questionnaire is to assess your child’s ability to use his/her impaired
arm. There is a list of 22 items and you will be asked to rate each item on two different 6 point
scales. On the first scale you will rate how often your child carries out each of the activities with
his/her involved arm. On the second scale you will rate how well your child uses the involved
arm for that activity. Your ratings can be in half steps if needed (i.e., 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, etc.). Please
consider your responses carefully so that you can give as accurate a picture of your child’s
activities as possible.”
3. Rating Scales
The How Well Scale (HW) is used during all test administrations. The How Often Scale
(HO) should be used at pre-treatment, the day after the cast is removed, post-treatment, and
follow-up testing. It should not be administered during treatment (when a cast or splint is worn
on the less-involved arm -see Comment 1). Caregivers should first be asked to rate all tasks
using the HO scale. In a separate iteration, caregivers should be asked to rate each item with the
HW scale. The tester should describe in detail the differences between the HO and HW scales
(as suggested in the instructions below). The tester should not ask the caregiver to rate items on
the HW scale if they have already scored use of the involved arm a 0 for HO. However, for post-
testing if the caregiver rates an item a 0 for HO then the score for HW should be carried over
0 - Not Used -Your child did not use the weaker arm for the activity.
1 - Very Rarely – 5% -10% of the time - Your child occasionally used the
weaker arm for the activity, but only very rarely.
2 - Rarely – About 25% of the time - Your child used the weaker arm at times,
but did the activity with the stronger arm most of the time.
3 - Sometimes –About 50% of the time - The weaker arm was used in
performing the activity, but only about half as much as the stronger arm.
4 - Often – About 75% of the time - The weaker arm was used in performing the
activity regularly, but just three-quarters as often as the stronger arm.
5 - Normal – 90%-100% of the time -The weaker arm was used as often as the
stronger arm to perform the activity.
0 - Not Used - Your child did not use the weaker arm at all for the activity.
1 - Very Poor - Your child had very little functional use of the weaker arm for
the activity. The arm may have moved during the activity but was of no real
functional help.
2 - Poor - Your child had minor functional use of the weaker arm for the
activity. The arm actively participated in the activity, but the stronger arm or
caregiver did most of the work.
3 - Fair or Moderate - The weaker arm was used to accomplish the activity, but
the performance was very slow and/or involved great difficulty.
4 - Almost Normal - The weaker arm was able to accomplish the activity
independently, but did so with some difficulty and/or inaccuracy.
Step One: The tester should remind the caregiver that these questions pertain to what
their child actually does outside the treatment setting – not what they think the child may be
able to do.
Step Two: The tester should inquire about each activity by asking the following
questions:
a. First Test Administration and Follow-Up Administrations – “During the past week, did your
child (state the activity) with their right/left arm?” b. Administrations During Treatment and
Post-Treatment – “Since the last time I asked you, did your child (state the activity)?”
Step Three: Rating How Often and How Well the Involved Arm Was Used.
a. How Often Rating: Ask the subject,” Using the How Often (HO) Scale, tell me how often
your child used his/her weaker arm to (state the activity).” Once the caregiver selects a rating,
verify the response by repeating the selected rating and say; “So, you believe that your child
(read the HO rating). Is that correct?” Once they agree, record the response in the blank HO
space provided on the Score Sheet for the initial response for that question
b. Probing the Response during all test administrations other than pre-treatment: The tester
should refer back to the score sheet of the previous test administered which should be kept on the
table at which they are sitting (but hidden from the caregiver’s view). If a rating change has
occurred since the last test administration, the tester should probe the response by asking the
1. “I see you rated your child (state either “higher” or “lower” – whichever is accurate) today
than the last time. Do you think there has been a real change?”
2. “Now that you have thought about it more, how would you rate it?”
record the rating in the second blank space on the answer sheet and go to the next question. If
c. How well Rating: Ask the subject, “Using the How Well (HW) Scale, tell me how well
your child used his/her involved arm when he/she did use it to (state the activity).” For the pre-
treatment administration, emphasize the difference between the HO and HW scales (See
Comment 3). Once the subject selects a rating, verify the response by repeating the selected
rating and say; “So, you believe that your child (read the selected HW rating). Is that correct?”
Once they agree, record the response in the blank HW space provided on the Score Sheet for the
4. Administration times
a. During the pre-treatment testing day the full PMAL (HO, HW).
b Every Monday during the treatment and the day after the cast has been removed a full HW
scale.
c. Half of the HW scale should be administered on the remaining treatment days (Tuesday –
d. Full PMAL (HO and HW) on the last day of treatment after the cast has been removed the
day before. (For example, when treatment is three weeks, the cast is removed at the beginning of
e. During the post-treatment testing day the full PMAL (HO, HW).
f. During each follow-up testing day the full PMAL (HO, HW).
scales by adding the rating scores on each of the scales and dividing by the number of items
asked. It is important that the parent/caregiver refer to the same items in the environment each
day when answering questions on the PMAL. This is to insure that the items in question remain
consistent throughout the course of the study. For example, item 12 “Open a door or cabinet”
involves different motor behaviors and levels of difficulty depending on which door or cabinet is
opened. If the parent first scores the child opening a particular cabinet, then that should be noted
in the comments section and that cabinet should be scored for the remainder of the study. As
noted above, if a caregiver answers “no” (they did not do the task), then try to determine why.
If you find that it is impossible for the child to carry out the activity (e.g., physically impossible
for child to do, activity never carried out in that family, or developmentally inappropriate), the
question is dropped from that and all other PMALs for that child and the mean score is
calculated with the remaining items only (e.g., divide by 21instead of 22). Otherwise, a rating
score of zero is entered for “no” responses, and the mean scores are calculated using the entire
PMAL (e.g., divide by 22). Use of the n/a category should be very sparing, since virtually all
children will have an opportunity to carry out each of the activities in the PMAL in their home.
If the child does not do a task because the caregiver does it for them (e.g., take off shoes or
socks), the therapist should ask the parent to let the child attempt that activity by themselves.
If a child does an activity during treatment and then does not do it on subsequent
treatment days because an opportunity did not present itself since the last PMAL administration,
the last score is carried forward. This is a conservative method of scoring since it is unlikely that
performance would get worse during treatment and much more likely that it would get better. If
a child does an activity pre-treatment, but cannot do it during treatment (e.g., in the hotel room
that item is “not applicable” (n/a or a dot or left blank, depending on the data entry system being
used). However, when the subject returns home and that activity can again be performed,
scoring of that item is resumed. During treatment, if a child is able to perform an activity but the
parent/caregiver did not see the child do it since the last time the therapist asked, then the last
HO and HW score is carried forward. HO and HW scores may only be carried forward until
post-testing.
COMMENTS
The HO rating scale should be used during the pre- and post-treatment test administrations, the
day after the cast is removed and in follow-up. It should not be used during treatment, as the
treatment involves restraint of the uninvolved arm, thereby inducing greatly increased use of the
involved arm. This would artificially inflate the appearance of a therapeutic effect that might not
persist after the end of treatment. However, if the cast is removed at the beginning of TD 14, this
would provide time on the last two treatment days for a child to exhibit the full range of
behaviors of which they are capable using both arms. Therefore, it is meaningful to obtain HO
information on those days. Post-treatment testing should be done approximately two days after
the end of treatment (e.g., after the weekend following the end of treatment; treatment should
carried out during the previous week. During treatment, ratings should be obtained for the time
since the caregiver was last asked about that specific task.
Comment 3: Differentiating between the How Well and How Often rating scales
When both scales are being used to rate activities, particularly during pre-treatment testing, it is
very important to make sure that the caregiver understands the difference between the scales. To
accomplish this the following statement should be made before asking for ratings on the HW
scale, “Remember that I am asking you to rate something different on this scale, the How Well
Scale, than you did before on the How Often Scale. Before you were supposed to rate how often
your child used his/her involved arm. Now I would like you to rate how well your child used
his/her involved arm. For example, he/she might have used the involved hand only rarely to
brush his/her teeth or to throw a ball. The How Often rating might therefore be a 1.5 or 2.
However when your child did use it, his/her use of the hand was really quite good; let us say
between fair and almost normal, or a 3.5. Do you understand the difference between the two
types of ratings?” Go over this several times if necessary and have the caregiver verbalize the
difference between the two types of ratings to make sure that it is understood.
Comment 4: Establishing a context or a common frame of rating reference for the HW Scale on
On the first testing occasion, the PMAL is administered by the therapist in order to establish the
project-standard frame of reference for rating. The frame of reference for each child should be
their less affected UE. The therapist should verify the response (e.g., “So, you rated that activity
a ‘3’. However, your child moved his/her arm just as well as the less affected arm. According to
the frame of reference for this project that would be scored more like a ‘5’. Do you agree?”).
observed concerning the child’s motor ability, the therapist should explain the meaning of the
HW rating scale for the task in question with examples being given for each step, especially
those that focus on the HW rating in question (e.g., “You rated that activity a ‘4’. However, your
child moved his/her arm very slowly to do the activity. So, for this project that would be more
During the standardized questioning, the caregivers should not be told their previous scores.
However, if their report reflects a change in score, whether an increase or a decrease, the change
in rating should be probed to determine whether it reflects a true change. In the treatment of
adults with CI therapy, probing results in revisions in the direction of performance decrement
The MAL was developed in 1986 by Edward Taub and Karen McCulloch. It was first used in
1987 in a study published several years later (Taub et al., 1993). Three studies have shown that
the adult MAL has strong clinimetric properties (Uswatte et al., 2005; Uswatte et al., 2006; van
der Lee et al., 2004). Additional reliability and validity data relating to the adult MAL are as
follows:
Taub and co-workers (2006) administered the adult MAL to a placebo control group (for UE CI
therapy) and found that the scores for the period before treatment and two weeks later (after the
end of the placebo treatment) were not significantly different. The correlation between pre- and
post-treatment Quality of Movement (How Well) scores was r = .94, p < .001. Miltner and co-
workers (1999) obtained similar findings; the second test administration in the Miltner et al.
the two tests were not significantly different from one another; they diverged by just 0.1 rating
step. Excellent agreement has been recorded between subjects and informants. There was
individual variability between some pairs, but on a group basis disagreement was small (0.3
rating steps). The intraclass correlation for pre- to post-treatment change scores for subjects and
informants was .97. Scores on both the adult and Pediatric MALs have real world referents and
are therefore not arbitrary numerical values. A study has been carried out on the 45-item higher
functioning adult UE/MAL’s reliability and validity (Johnson et al., 2004). The test-retest
reliability of the test over a period of 2 weeks (the duration of adult UE treatment) was .99 and
.98 for the two scales of the test, respectively. The correlation of the two MAL scales with the
Abilhand (a reliable and valid test of real world UE use) was .88 and .71, respectively (all p’s <
.05). The validity of the MAL has also been supported by high correlations between its two
scales and objective accelerometer-based measures of impaired arm movement, r’s > .75, p’s <
The precursor of the PMAL was initially used in a study by Taub, Ramey, DeLuca, and
Echols(2004). The PMAL in its current form was described in a study by Taub, Griffin, Nick,
Gammons, Uswatte, & Law (2007, 2011). The PMAL has a high internal consistency
(Chronbach’s a - .93) and test-retest reliability (n = .91). Convergent validity was supported by a
strong correlation (r = .5) between changes in the PMAL scores and use of the more-affected
Adult MAL
Johnson A, Judson L, Morris D, Uswatte G, Taub E. The validity and reliability of the 45
Item Upper Extremity Motor Activity Log. Presented at the American Physical Therapy
Association Combined Sections meeting, Nashville, TN, February 2004.
Taub E, Miller NE, Novack T, Cook EW, III, Fleming WC, Nepomuceno CS, Connell JS, Crago
J. Technique to improve chronic motor deficit after stroke. Arch Phys Med Rehabil1993;74:347-
354
Taub E, Uswatte G, King DK, Morris D, Crago J, Chatterjee A. A placebo controlled trial
of Constraint-Induced Movement therapy for upper extremity after stroke. Stroke 2006;37:1045-
1049.
Uswatte G, Taub E, Morris D, Light K, Thompson, P. The Motor Activity Log-28: assessing
daily use of the hemiparetic arm after stroke. Neurol 2006;67: 1189-1194.
Van der Lee J, Beckerman H, Knol D, de Vet H, Bouter L. Clinimetric properties of the
Motor Activity Log for the assessment of arm use in hemiparetic patients. Stroke 2004;35:1-5.
Taub E, Griffin A, Nick J, Gammons K, Uswatte G, Law CR. Pediatric CI therapy for stroke-
induced hemiparesis in young children. Devel Neurorehabil 2007;10:1-16
Uswatte G, Taub E, Griffin MA, Vogtle L, Rowe J, Barman J. The Pediatric Motor Activity Log-
Revised: assessing real-world arm use in children with cerebral palsy. Rehabilitation
Psychology; In press.
ABILITY TO USE HIS/HER IMPAIRED ARM. THERE IS A LIST OF 22 ITEMS AND YOU
THE FIRST SCALE YOU WILL RATE HOW OFTEN YOUR CHILD CARRIES OUT EACH
SCALE YOU WILL RATE HOW WELL YOUR CHILD USES THE MORE INVOLVED ARM
FOR THAT ACTIVITY. YOUR RATINGS CAN BE IN HALF STEPS IF NEEDED (I.E., 1.5,
2.5, 3.5, ETC.). PLEASE CONSIDER YOUR RESPONSES CAREFULLY SO THAT YOU
Parent’s Name: ____________________________ (Circle one) Pre During _____ Post F/U _____
Day Wk/Mo
Group (circle):
Research: Experimental Control Crossover _____weeks
Examiner: ________________________________
Please record the subject’s initial response; then after probing, record the final response for both HW and HO for all
tasks. The HO rating scale should only be used during the pre- and post-treatment test administrations, as well as
the day after the cast is removed and during follow-up. The full HW scale should be administered pre- and post-
treatment, and TD 1, 6, and 11(e.g., Mondays), as well as follow-ups. Successive halves of the PMAL should be
administered on each of the remaining treatment days (e.g. Tuesdays- Fridays).
PART I
HO HW
Initial Final Initial Final
2. Pick up a small item ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
(e.g., cheerio, raisin, small bead, or dice)
_________________________________________
_________________________________________
Comments __________________________________________________________________________________
9. Reach for an object ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
above head ____________________________________
____________________________________
Comments _________________________________________________________________________________
10. Push a button or key ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
(e.g., toy, doorbell, __________________________________________
keyboard) __________________________________________
Comments _________________________________________________________________________________
11. Steady self ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
(e.g. use for postural support) __________________________________________
__________________________________________
Comments _________________________________________________________________________________
14. Use arm to move ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
across floor (e.g., ___________________________________________
creep, crawl, scoot) ___________________________________________
Comments __________________________________________________________________________________
17. Push large object ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
across floor (e.g., __________________________________________
box, chair, stool) __________________________________________
Comments _________________________________________________________________________________
19. Throw a ball or ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
other object ___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Comments __________________________________________________________________________________
Codes for recording “no” responses:
1. “Child used the stronger arm entirely.” (assign “0”).
2. “Someone else did it for the child.” (assign “0”).
3. “Child never has the opportunity to do that activity.” (assign “0” and ask caregiver to provide an opportunity).
4. “Child sometimes does that activity, but I did not see the child since the last time I answered these questions.”
(carry-over last assigned score for that activity).
5. Child only did activity in therapy (carry-over last assigned score for that activity).
6. Impossible for child to do/developmentally inappropriate.
20. Use a cylindrical ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
object (e.g., crayon, __________________________________________
marker) __________________________________________
Comments _________________________________________________________________________________
21. Hold a handle while ____ ____ ____ ____ If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
riding, pulling, or ___________________________________________
pushing a toy (e.g., tricycle, ___________________________________________
shopping cart, baby buggy) ___________________________________________
Comments __________________________________________________________________________________
22. Placement of object If no, what do you think is the reason? (use code)
(e.g. puzzle piece, shape sorter) ___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Comments __________________________________________________________________________________
0 - Not Used -Your child did not use the weaker arm for the
activity.
4 - Often – About 75% of the time - The weaker arm was used
in performing the activity regularly, but just three-quarters as
often as the stronger arm.
0 - Not Used - Your child did not use the weaker arm at all for
the activity.
1 - Very Poor - Your child had very little functional use of the
weaker arm for the activity. The arm may have moved during
the activity but was of no real functional help.