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FOIS Scale

Functional Oral Intake Scale — Functional Assessment of Oral Intake in Dysphagia

Interpretation of FOIS Levels

The FOIS (Functional Oral Intake Scale) was developed by Crary, Mann, and Groher in 2005 as a simple, objective, and validated tool to document the functional level of oral intake in patients with dysphagia. It is widely used by Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs) in hospital, outpatient, and rehabilitation settings to monitor swallowing progression, guide therapeutic decisions, and assist in discharge planning. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) recognizes the FOIS as a standard outcome measure in dysphagia management.

Level Description Clinical Interpretation
1 Nothing by mouth Exclusively tube-fed
2 Tube dependent with minimal oral intake Initial swallowing attempts; nutrition still via tube
3 Tube dependent with consistent oral intake Regular but insufficient oral intake; tube maintained
4 Total oral intake of a single consistency Exclusively oral feeding, but restricted to one texture
5 Total oral intake of multiple consistencies, but requiring special preparation Varied diet with modifications (thickening, adapted texture)
6 Total oral intake of multiple consistencies, without special preparation, but with restrictions Near-normal diet; avoids only specific foods
7 Total oral intake with no restrictions Normal functional swallowing; no dietary limitations

Clinical Applications of the FOIS

The FOIS is widely used by Speech-Language Pathologists to:

  • Objectively document the patient's oral feeding status
  • Monitor swallowing rehabilitation progress over time
  • Facilitate communication between members of the multidisciplinary team
  • Assist in decisions regarding removal or continuation of enteral feeding tubes
  • Establish clear and measurable therapeutic goals
  • Evaluate the effectiveness of SLP interventions
  • Provide objective data for research and studies on dysphagia

Important Considerations for Assessment

Key points for correct application of the scale:

  • The FOIS documents the FUNCTIONAL level of oral intake (what the patient actually does day-to-day), not theoretical capacity
  • Patients at levels 2 and 3 remain predominantly dependent on tube feeding for adequate nutrition and hydration
  • The transition from level 3 to level 4 represents a critical milestone: complete independence from alternative feeding routes
  • Special preparations (level 5) include: fluid thickening, texture modification of solids, use of postural strategies or swallowing maneuvers
  • Progression between levels should be based on careful clinical assessment and, where indicated, instrumental examinations (videofluoroscopy or videoendoscopy)
  • The scale does not replace comprehensive clinical and instrumental swallowing assessments

References

  • 1. Crary MA, Mann GD, Groher ME. "Initial psychometric assessment of a functional oral intake scale for dysphagia in stroke patients." Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2005;86(8):1516–1520. PubMed ↗
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