Intellectual Disabilities

Key Points

  • Intellectual disability involves limits in intellectual and adaptive functioning with onset in the developmental period.
  • Current diagnosis emphasizes conceptual, social, and practical domains, not IQ score alone.
  • Causes include genetic, prenatal, perinatal, and environmental factors, though some cases remain unknown.
  • Early intervention and family-centered supports improve long-term function and quality of life.

Pathophysiology

intellectual-disabilities are neurodevelopmental conditions affecting learning, reasoning, and adaptive daily function. Clinical presentation ranges from mild to severe and is shaped by both biologic vulnerability and environmental context.

Etiology may include chromosomal syndromes, fetal alcohol exposure, perinatal injury, infections, toxic exposures, or head trauma. In many milder cases, the exact cause is not definitively identified.

Classification

  • Conceptual domain: Language, literacy, numeracy, memory, and reasoning challenges.
  • Social domain: Difficulties in social judgment, communication, and relationship skills.
  • Practical domain: Reduced independence with self-care, school/work tasks, and daily living skills.

Nursing Assessment

NCLEX Focus

Assess adaptive functioning and safety needs while collaborating closely with family and school systems.

  • Assess developmental history, milestone delays, and present functional strengths.
  • Assess conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills across home and school settings.
  • Assess comorbid psychiatric and medical conditions affecting behavior or participation.
  • Assess caregiver burden, long-term planning needs, and available supports.
  • Assess culturally shaped stigma or family expectations that may affect engagement.

Nursing Interventions

  • Promote early referral to developmental, speech, occupational, and behavioral services.
  • Reinforce individualized education planning and community support linkage.
  • Teach caregivers structured routines, skill-building strategies, and positive reinforcement.
  • Coordinate person-centered care plans that focus on strengths and attainable goals.
  • Advocate for preventive health access and transition planning across the life span.

Delayed Support Risk

Late recognition and delayed intervention can worsen educational, social, and safety outcomes.

Pharmacology

No medication directly treats intellectual disability itself. Pharmacologic care is symptom-targeted for comorbid conditions such as attention-deficit-hyperactivity-disorder, mood symptoms, or behavioral dysregulation.

Nurses monitor response, adverse effects, and functional outcomes while reinforcing nonpharmacologic developmental supports.

Clinical Judgment Application

Clinical Scenario

A school-age child has persistent learning delays, social boundary difficulties, and dependence in daily routines despite average attendance and family support.

Recognize Cues: Multi-domain adaptive deficits with developmental onset. Analyze Cues: Pattern suggests intellectual disability rather than isolated academic difficulty. Prioritize Hypotheses: Priorities are safety, functional support, and rapid service coordination. Generate Solutions: Initiate interdisciplinary referrals and school-family planning. Take Action: Implement structured supports and caregiver coaching. Evaluate Outcomes: Improved adaptive skills, school participation, and caregiver confidence.