Publication | Open Access
A randomised controlled trial to determine the effect of intensity of therapy upon length of stay in a neurological rehabilitation setting
122
Citations
14
References
2002
Year
DisabilityEducationNeurological RehabilitationCognitive RehabilitationBrain Injury RehabilitationStroke RehabilitationStrokeHealth-related Quality Of LifeNeurologyNeurorehabilitationRandomised Single-blindPsychiatryRehabilitationTelerehabilitationPhysical TreatmentRehabilitation ProcessPhysical TherapyFunctional RecoveryOccupational TherapyConcussionMultiple SclerosisMedicine
A randomised single-blind controlled trial was designed to determine whether intensity of therapy (physiotherapy and occupational therapy) shortened length of stay for patients in a rehabilitation unit. Patients were under 65, primarily with stroke, but also with other conditions such as traumatic brain injury, and multiple sclerosis. The experimental group were timetabled to receive 67% more therapy in any given week, than the control group. After controlling for confounders and case mix (as expressed by type of therapy required) patients in the experimental group showed a significant 14-day reduction in length of stay (<0.01). Concurrently average length of stay was increased for both groups by 16 days due to delays in discharge.
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