What does PNA Level 1 and Standard Housing mean on my letter from OT?
Posted by Much-Butterscotch414@reddit | AskUK | View on Reddit | 5 comments
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GentlemanJoe@reddit
I think you should block out the OT's name as well.
L-0-T-H-0-S@reddit
In the context of an Occupational Therapy assessment, PNA Level 1 and Standard Housing generally indicate that the assessment found you have a low level of functional need for specific housing adaptations.
A score of Level 1 (or 0) typically means there is no substantial level of need for significant mobility or accessibility modifications. In many council housing allocation schemes, this level does not usually qualify an applicant for a higher priority "medical" or "disability" banding.
Standard Housing means you do not require a property with major accessibility features. You are considered able to manage in a "standard" home, which typically includes properties like typical flats or houses that lack major adaptations such as wet rooms, through-floor lifts, or specialized wheelchair access
Buddy-Matt@reddit
Priority Needs Assesment - at least according to Google.
Buddy-Matt@reddit
(And im guessing now, but I'd assume standard means just a house/flat, as opposed to assisted living)
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