Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)

The Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS) is a 10-item self-report questionnaire measuring the severity of fatigue. It includes two subscales: Physical Fatigue (Q1-5, range 5-25) and Mental Fatigue (Q6-10, range 5-25). Total score ranges from 10-50, with higher scores indicating greater fatigue.

Specialties: rheumatology, respiratory, general_practice, neurology, physiotherapy

Time:2 min
Pages:2
Questions:10
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Example Assessment Result

Patient-Reported Outcome Measure

Total Score
72/100
Clinical InterpretationModerate Function
Section 1
Completed (8/10)
Section 2
Completed (7/10)
Remaining sections
All responses submitted
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TimingBaseline
Date15 Jan 2024

FAS Total38/50
Physical Fatigue20/25
Mental Fatigue18/25
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About the Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)

The Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS) is a brief, validated self-report questionnaire that assesses both physical and mental aspects of fatigue. It is one of the most widely used fatigue measures in sarcoidosis research and clinical practice, and has been validated across numerous medical conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and chronic fatigue. Its brevity (10 items, ~2 minutes) makes it practical for routine clinical use.

Prevalence:
common

Medical Specialties

Rheumatology
Respiratory
General Practice
Neurology
Physiotherapy

Clinical Indications

Fatigue
Sarcoidosis
Chronic Fatigue
Rheumatoid Arthritis
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Developer Information

Developed by Michielsen, De Vries, and Van Heck at Tilburg University, Netherlands. Originally published in 2003 as a general fatigue measure. Subsequently validated extensively in sarcoidosis populations by De Vries, Drent, and colleagues.

Copyright & Licensing

The FAS is freely available for use in clinical practice and research. No license or permission is required. Available from the ild care foundation (www.ildcare.nl).

Administration Instructions

The following ten statements refer to how you usually feel. Per statement you can choose one out of five answer categories, varying from Never to Always. Please select the answer to each question that is applicable to you. Please give an answer to each question, even if you do not have any complaints at the moment.

Scoring Methodology

The FAS consists of 10 items each scored on a 5-point Likert scale (1=Never to 5=Always). Items 4 ("I have enough energy for everyday life") and 10 ("When I am doing something, I can concentrate quite well") are positively worded and reverse scored. Physical Fatigue subscale: sum of Q1-Q5 (range 5-25). Mental Fatigue subscale: sum of Q6-Q10 (range 5-25). Total score: sum of all 10 items (range 10-50). Higher scores indicate greater fatigue severity.

Scoring:
Lower is better

Meaningful Change Threshold

The minimal clinically important difference (MCID) for the FAS total score is approximately 4 points. A change of 3 or more points on a subscale may also be clinically meaningful.

Score Interpretation

Understanding what your score means

no fatigue

10 - 21

No substantial fatigue

substantial fatigue

22 - 34

Substantial fatigue

extreme fatigue

35 - 50

Extreme fatigue

Subscales

This questionnaire measures multiple dimensions

Mental Fatigue (5-25)

5 questions

Measures mental/cognitive aspects of fatigue including concentration, motivation, and mental exhaustion (Q6-Q10)

Physical Fatigue (5-25)

5 questions

Measures physical aspects of fatigue including energy levels and physical exhaustion (Q1-Q5)

Clinical Limitations & Considerations

The FAS measures perceived fatigue and cannot distinguish between causes of fatigue. It was originally developed for the general population and later validated in specific clinical populations. The two-factor structure (physical/mental) has been questioned in some populations. Not validated in children under 18.

Supporting Literature

Key validation and development studies for the Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)

  1. 1

    Psychometric qualities of a brief self-rated fatigue measure: The Fatigue Assessment Scale

    Michielsen HJ, De Vries J, Van Heck GL

    Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 2003

  2. 2

    Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS): determinants and minimal clinically important difference in sarcoidosis

    De Kleijn WP, De Vries J, Jacobs WC, Drent M

    Sarcoidosis, Vasculitis, and Diffuse Lung Diseases, 2011

  3. 3

    Psychometric qualities of a brief self-rated fatigue measure: The Fatigue Assessment Scale

    Michielsen HJ, De Vries J, Van Heck GL

    Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 2003

  4. 4

    Measuring fatigue in sarcoidosis: The Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)

    De Vries J, Michielsen H, Van Heck GL, Drent M

    British Journal of Health Psychology, 2004

  5. 5

    Minimal (clinically) important differences for the Fatigue Assessment Scale in sarcoidosis

    De Kleijn WPE, De Vries J, Wijnen PAHM, Drent M

    Respiratory Medicine, 2011

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