1.Advances in rehabilitation medicine.
Yee Sien NG ; Effie CHEW ; Geoffrey S SAMUEL ; Yeow Leng TAN ; Keng He KONG
Singapore medical journal 2013;54(10):538-551
Rehabilitation medicine is the medical specialty that integrates rehabilitation as its core therapeutic modality in disability management. More than a billion people worldwide are disabled, and the World Health Organization has developed the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health as a framework through which disability is addressed. Herein, we explore paradigm shifts in neurorehabilitation, with a focus on restoration, and provide overviews on developments in neuropharmacology, rehabilitation robotics, virtual reality, constraint-induced therapy and brain stimulation. We also discuss important issues in rehabilitation systems of care, including integrated care pathways, very early rehabilitation, early supported discharge and telerehabilitation. Finally, we highlight major new fields of rehabilitation such as spasticity management, frailty and geriatric rehabilitation, intensive care and cancer rehabilitation.
Disability Evaluation
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Disabled Persons
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classification
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rehabilitation
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Humans
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Practice Guidelines as Topic
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Rehabilitation
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methods
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standards
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trends
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World Health Organization
2.Predictors of Acute, Rehabilitation and Total Length of Stay in Acute Stroke: A Prospective Cohort Study.
Yee Sien NG ; Kristin Hx TAN ; Cynthia CHEN ; Gilmore C SENOLOS ; Effie CHEW ; Gerald Ch KOH
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore 2016;45(9):394-403
INTRODUCTIONThe poststroke acute and rehabilitation length of stay (LOS) are key markers of stroke care efficiency. This study aimed to describe the characteristics and identify the predictors of poststroke acute, rehabilitation and total LOS. This study also defined a subgroup of patients as "short" LOS and compared its complication rates and functional outcomes in rehabilitation with a "long" acute LOS group.
MATERIALS AND METHODSA prospective cohort study (n = 1277) was conducted in a dedicated rehabilitation unit within a tertiary academic acute hospital over a 5-year period between 2004 and 2009. The functional independence measure (FIM) was the primary functional outcome measure in the rehabilitation phase. A group with an acute LOS of less than 7 days was defined as "short" acute LOS.
RESULTSIschaemic strokes comprised 1019 (80%) of the cohort while the rest were haemorrhagic strokes. The mean acute and rehabilitation LOS were 9 ± 7 days and 18 ± 10 days, respectively. Haemorrhagic strokes and anterior circulation infarcts had significantly longer acute, rehabilitation and total LOS compared to posterior circulation and lacunar infarcts. The acute, rehabilitation and total LOS were significantly shorter for stroke admissions after 2007. There was poor correlation (r = 0.12) between the acute and rehabilitation LOS. In multivariate analyses, stroke type was strongly associated with acute LOS, while rehabilitation admission FIM scores were significantly associated with rehabilitation LOS. Patients in the short acute LOS group had fewer medical complications and similar FIM efficacies compared to the longer acute LOS group.
CONCLUSIONConsideration for stroke type and initial functional status will facilitate programme planning that has a better estimation of the LOS duration, allowing for more equitable resource distribution across the inpatient stroke continuum. We advocate earlier transfers of appropriate patients to rehabilitation units as this ensures rehabilitation efficacy is maintained while the development of medical complications is potentially minimised.
Activities of Daily Living ; Acute Disease ; Brain Ischemia ; rehabilitation ; therapy ; Humans ; Intracranial Hemorrhages ; rehabilitation ; therapy ; Length of Stay ; statistics & numerical data ; Prospective Studies ; Stroke ; therapy ; Stroke Rehabilitation ; statistics & numerical data ; Treatment Outcome