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1.
Purpose: After rehabilitation, it is not clear the extent to which persons living with a disability return to their former activities in the community, such as going to shopping malls. Rehabilitation professionals are faced with the challenge to adequately prepare their clients to resume community participation. The purpose of this study was to identify rehabilitation strategies aimed at preparing clients to engage in activities in shopping malls.

Method: Twenty-two participants including 16 rehabilitation clinicians and 6 persons living with a disability participated in four nominal group sessions. Participants were questioned on current or potential rehabilitation strategies carried out to enhance participation in shopping malls for persons living with a disability. Discussions were audio-recorded and qualitative content analysis was conducted.

Results: Participants mentioned strategies that were either carried out by the clinician, or in collaboration with other parties. The latter type of strategies was either carried out with the collaboration of the client, the interdisciplinary team, the relatives, or community organizations.

Conclusions: Rehabilitation clinicians have a role to play in preparing persons living with a disability to resume activities in a shopping mall. Additionally, therapeutic interventions in community settings may enhance the participation of rehabilitation clients in their everyday activities.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Many strategies are currently used in rehabilitation to prepare persons living with a disability to resume shopping activities.

  • Clinicians could implement shopping-oriented rehabilitation strategies with the client and/or with other rehabilitation partners.

  • Involving clients in activities related to shopping might enhance their participation in shopping malls after rehabilitation.

  • Rehabilitation clinicians can be facilitators for people living with a disability to reach optimal participation.

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2.
Purpose: To test if the Rehabilitation Complexity Scale Extended (RCS-E) can be used as decision support for patient referral to primary rehabilitation as either complex specialized services (CSS) or district specialist services (DSS).

Method: Two independent expert teams analyzed medical records on 299 consecutive patients admitted for CSS or DSS rehabilitation. One team provided a golden standard for the patient referrals, and the other team provided RCS-E scores. Models for predicting referrals from RCS-E scores were developed on data for 149 patients and tested on the remaining 150 patients.

Results: The optimal RCS-E sum score threshold for referral prediction was 11, predicting the golden standard for patient referral with sensitivity 88%, specificity 78% and correct classification rate 81%. Improved referral prediction performance was achieved by using RCS-E item-wise score thresholds (sensitivity 81%, specificity 89%, correct classification rate 87%). The RCS-E sum score range for patients referred CSS and DSS by the item-wise model was, respectively, 0–12 and 2–22 suggesting strong non-linear interaction of the RCS-E items.

Conclusions: We found excellent referral decision support in the RCS-E and the item specific threshold model, when patients with acquired brain injury are to be referred to CSS or DSS as their primary rehabilitation.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Efficient rehabilitation after acquired brain injury requires rehabilitation settings that meet patient needs.

  • Validated tools for referral decision support make the process more transparent.

  • Patient rehabilitation complexity can be stratified by the RCS-E with high sensitivity, specificity and predictive value of positive test.

  • RCS-E is an excellent tool for referral decision support.

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3.
Purpose: The aim was to investigate the feasibility of introducing a novel transdiagnostic occupational rehabilitation program delivered in groups mixing participants with chronic pain, chronic fatigue and common mental disorders.

Materials and methods: Observational data on group climate and individual participation were triangulated with qualitative data from focus group interviews on the participants’ experiences with transdiagnostic groups.

Results: The study included 222 participants receiving a temporary work disability benefit. Self-reported chronic pain (75%), chronic fatigue (79%), and mental distress (62%) were prevalent and the majority reported overlapping conditions (78%). Program completion among participants was high (96%). Those completing participated actively (95%) in the program. Overall group climate was stable with moderately high engagement. Participants with clinically confirmed mental disorders (22%) showed similar outcomes. Self-reported problems with “working in a group” prior to rehabilitation were not associated with how participants experienced group climate. Qualitative data supported the findings of positive participant experiences with transdiagnostic group settings.

Conclusions: Transdiagnostic groups showed high participation rates, moderately high group engagement across symptom profiles and positive participant experiences. Implementing transdiagnostic occupational rehabilitation in groups mixing participants with chronic pain, chronic fatigue and common mental disorders was feasible and acceptable to participants.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Most research has been done on disorder-specific occupational rehabilitation programs, but emerging evidence supports a more generic approach.

  • Transdiagnostic therapies, such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), have shown promising results for both somatic and mental disorders.

  • The feasibility of implementing transdiagnostic rehabilitation groups, their acceptability to participants and the demand for such groups has not been established.

  • This study indicates that it is feasible to introduce a novel transdiagnostic group-based occupational rehabilitation program for mixed groups of sick-listed participants with chronic pain, chronic fatigue and/or common mental disorders.

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4.
Purpose: Medical comorbidities in stroke patients influence acute mortality, but may also affect participation of survivors in rehabilitation. There is limited research investigating the impact of comorbidities on stroke rehabilitation outcomes. The review will explore the literature on the impact of comorbidities on stroke rehabilitation outcome.

Materials and methods: The literature was searched systematically, including MEDLINE database, EMBASE and PsychINFO, combining variations of the terms stroke, rehabilitation and comorbidities. Results were limited to English language publications. Included studies had a functional outcome.

Results: Twenty relevant articles were identified. Fifteen small prospective or large retrospective studies using global comorbidity scales produced conflicting relationships between comorbidities and rehabilitation outcomes. Five publications addressed specific comorbidities, with three studies finding negative correlation between diabetes and rehabilitation outcomes, although effects diminished with age. In general, there were discrepancies in how comorbidities were identified. Few studies specifically focused on comorbidities and/or rehabilitation outcomes.

Conclusions: There is conflicting evidence regarding the impact of comorbidities on stroke rehabilitation outcomes. However, the presence of more severe diabetes may be associated with worse outcomes. The role of comorbidities in stroke rehabilitation would be best clarified with a large cohort study, with precise comorbidity identification measured against rehabilitation specific outcomes.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Benefit of rehabilitation after stroke in improving functional outcome is well-established.

  • Many stroke patients have comorbid conditions which can impact rehabilitation participation, leading to less benefit obtained from rehabilitation.

  • The burden of comorbid conditions may slow rehabilitation progress, which may warrant a longer duration of rehabilitation to obtain required functional gain to be discharged into the community.

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5.
Purpose: This systematic literature review aims to explore the relationship between social determinants of health (SDH), and the rehabilitation of neurological conditions. In particular, the review will consider relationships between social determinants and peoples’ attendance and sustained adherence to rehabilitation programs, and motivation regarding neurological rehabilitation.

Method: A systematic search of peer-reviewed literature from electronic databases; MEDLINE, Scopus, CINAHL and Informit health, was conducted. Papers published between 2004 and 2014 were considered.

Results: Eleven quantitative studies met the inclusion criteria. There was a lack of research addressing SDH and neurological rehabilitation simultaneously. Cardiac and cancer rehabilitation studies reported employment and income, social support, transport, housing and food security as the most frequent SDH factors influencing attendance, sustained adherence and motivation. Given this association, a similar relationship between neurological rehabilitation and SDH is plausible.

Conclusions: Rehabilitation of neurological conditions can be a long and difficult process. To pursue optimal outcomes, an individual’s social circumstances should be considered. Understanding how SDH interact with neurological rehabilitation may enhance service delivery, thus maximizing the possible rehabilitation outcomes for individuals. Future research that considers SDH and rehabilitation of neurological conditions jointly may benefit service providers and those requiring neurological rehabilitation.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Social determinants of health are important to consider in the rehabilitation of neurological conditions.

  • Understanding the interplay between the social determinants of health and neurological rehabilitation may enhance the possible outcomes for those requiring rehabilitation.

  • Increased awareness and capacity of health care professionals involved in neurological rehabilitation may hasten momentum towards decreased health disparities instigated by undesirable social determinants of health.

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6.
Purpose: The aim of the present study was to investigate the effectiveness of a prospective memory aid that combines smartphones with Internet-based calendars among community-dwelling patients with traumatic brain injury.

Method: An uncontrolled pre- and post-assessment design was employed to study the use of unmodified, low-cost, off-the-shelf smartphones combined with Internet-calendars as a compensatory memory strategy in community-dwelling patients with traumatic brain injury. Thirteen participants received a 6-week group-based intervention with pre-, post- and 2-month follow-up-assessments by questionnaires and by daily assessment of target behaviors for 2-week periods.

Results: Participants reported significantly fewer retro- and prospective memory problems on questionnaires after the intervention and at follow-up with large effect sizes. The performance of target behaviors, however, improved insignificantly with moderate effect sizes. There were no changes in quality of life or symptoms of emotional distress.

Conclusions: This study adds to a growing body of evidence that smartphones are a useful compensatory aid in rehabilitation of prospective memory that should routinely be considered in rehabilitation of traumatic brain injury patients.

  • Implication for rehabilitation
  • Smartphones are easy-to-use and accessible assistive technology for compensatory memory rehabilitation to most traumatic brain injury patients.

  • By using low-cost, off-the-shelf devices, the technology becomes available to a broader range of patients.

  • By combining smartphones with Internet-based and cross-platform services (e.g., calendars, contacts) the participants are less device-dependent and less vulnerable to data loss.

  • Smartphones should routinely be considered as compensatory aid in rehabilitation of prospective memory of traumatic brain injured patients.

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7.
Purpose: To describe the rehabilitation treatment and outcome of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in the context of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).

Method: The medical history of two HIV-positive patients with PML was reviewed; information on their neurological impairments, rehabilitation treatment and outcome was gathered.

Results: The patients, a 47-year-old married man and a 34-year-old single man, both suffered from dense right hemiplegia and motor aphasia. Their rehabilitation course was delayed and prolonged: they were suitable for intensive multidisciplinary rehabilitation only 8 months or more after the initial presentation. Their treatment in outpatient rehabilitation daycare three times a week, that lasted 7 months on average, resulted in slow and steady functional improvement. At the end of the rehabilitation treatment, both patients were living at home, able to express themselves, and able to walk independently with an assistive device. They remained with moderate disability (modified Rankin scale of 3).

Conclusion: PML patients require prolonged multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment; however, considerable progress can be achieved.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is a disabling disease occurring in particular in the context of Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).

  • Presently a growing number of HIV-positive PML patients eventually survive the disease and remain with severe neurological impairments.

  • PML patients require prolonged multidisciplinary rehabilitation treatment, and considerable progress can be achieved.

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8.
Purpose: People with vestibular disorders are typically treated by physiotherapists in vestibular rehabilitation. Anxiety is strongly associated with vestibular disorders; however, there is a lack of understanding about how physiotherapists respond to people presenting with anxiety within vestibular rehabilitation. This study aimed to explore physiotherapists’ current practice in assessing and treating patients with anxiety in vestibular rehabilitation.

Materials and methods: A qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 10 specialist physiotherapists in vestibular rehabilitation in three university teaching hospitals in England. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis.

Results: Four themes were identified: (i) The therapeutic relationship, (ii) Adapting assessment and treatment, (iii) Psychological intervention and support, and (iv) Physiotherapists’ education and training. Physiotherapists reported using a range of behavioral and cognitive techniques and adapting their therapeutic approach by placing greater emphasis on education, building trust and pacing treatment. Physiotherapists highlighted the need for more specialist psychological support for patients during vestibular rehabilitation and tailored training and guidance on addressing anxiety within vestibular rehabilitation.

Conclusions: Physiotherapists working in vestibular rehabilitation consider managing aspects of anxiety within their scope of practice and describe taking a psychosocial therapeutic approach. There is limited access to expert psychological support for patients with anxiety within vestibular rehabilitation.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Anxiety is strongly associated with vestibular disorders and it is common for these patients to be managed by physiotherapists in vestibular rehabilitation.

  • Vestibular rehabilitation services could improve access to psychological expertise through dedicated psychological input, more effective signposting and referral pathways, and better access to inter-professional support from psychologists and/or CBT practitioners in managing more complex patients.

  • Physiotherapists requested tailored training and guidance to enhance their ability to manage patients with anxiety more effectively in vestibular rehabilitation.

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9.
Purpose: Conceptualizations of risk in seniors’ rehabilitation emphasize potential physical injury, functional independence and cost containment, shifting rehabilitation from other considerations essential to promoting a satisfying life. In a two-day multidisciplinary planning meeting we critically examined and discussed alternatives to dominant conceptualizations.

Method: Invitees reflected on conceptualizations of risk in stroke rehabilitation and low vision rehabilitation, identified and explored positive and negative implications and generated alternative perspectives to support rehabilitation approaches related to living a good life.

Results: Current risk conceptualizations help focus rehabilitation teamwork and make this work publically recognizable and valued. However, they also lead to practice that is depersonalized, decontextualized and restrictive. Further research and practice development initiatives should include the voices of clinicians and seniors to more adequately support meaningfully living, and foster safe spaces for seniors and clinicians to speak candidly, comprehensively and respectfully about risk. To ensure that seniors’ rehabilitation targets a satisfying life as defined by seniors, increased focus on the environment and more explicit examination of how cost containment concerns are driving services is also necessary.

Conclusion: This work reinforced current concerns about conceptualizations of risk in seniors’ rehabilitation and generated ways forward that re-focus rehabilitation more on promoting a satisfying life.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • In seniors’ rehabilitation, considerations of risk focus on physical injury, functional dependence and cost containment.

  • Focus on provider-defined risk of physical injury limits examination of patient goals and patients’ histories of judging and dealing with risk.

  • Focus on functional dependence and cost containment may lead to practice that is depersonalized and decontextualized.

  • Abandonment of ableist and ageist thinking and an explicit focus on person-centered definitions of risk and a satisfying life are recommended.

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10.
Aim: The aim of this study was to explore how shopping malls could be used during rehabilitation and to identify the facilitators and barriers to their use.

Method: Two focus groups, conducted with 15 rehabilitation professionals from various disciplines and working with people with disabilities of all ages were structured around two topics: (i) The usage of malls for rehabilitation and (ii) Factors that facilitate or limit rehabilitation professionals’ use of the mall as an environment for clinical assessment and/or intervention.

Results: The thematic analysis revealed that shopping malls were used to achieve several rehabilitation goals targeting physical and cognitive skills, psychological health and socialization. This real-life environment is motivating and helps foster independence and normalization. Factors affecting mall use during rehabilitation included personal factors (e.g. clients’ personality and level of readiness) and environmental factors (e.g. clinical context, accessibility of the mall and social attitudes of store owners).

Conclusion: Shopping malls may be a relevant rehabilitation assessment and treatment environment that could contribute to optimizing community integration of people with disabilities.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • To ensure successful community reintegration, clients could be trained at some point during their rehabilitation, to perform activities in real-life settings, such as a shopping mall.

  • Shopping malls appear to enable the attainment of rehabilitation goals targeting a variety of skills.

  • This real-life environment appears to be motivating and helps foster independence and normalization.

  • Factors felt to affect mall use during rehabilitation include personal factors (e.g. clients’ personality and level of readiness) and environmental factors (e.g. clinical context, accessibility of the mall and social attitudes of store owners).

  • The shopping mall may be an untapped resource as it appears to be a relevant rehabilitation assessment and treatment environment that could contribute to optimizing community integration of people with disabilities.

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11.
12.
Purpose: Inpatients admitted to rehabilitation express needs not linked to disease causing hospitalization.

This observational cross-sectional study identifies features and occupational needs of complex inpatients during rehabilitation, focusing on function and ability, regardless of diagnosis.

Method: This study included sixteen adult inpatients with stroke, deemed complex according to Rehabilitation Complexity Scale-Extended, at admission to Rehabilitation ward (from July 2014 to February 2015). Patients with primary psychiatric disorders, language barriers, cognitive or severe communication deficits were excluded. Upon admission, a multidisciplinary team collected data on general health, independence in daily activities (Modified Barthel Index), fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale), resistance to sitting and ability to perform instrumental activities (Instrumental Activities of Daily Living). The occupational therapist identified occupational needs according to Canadian Occupational Performance Measure.

Results: Inpatients enrolled in this study were dependent in basic ADL, limited in instrumental ADL and easily fatigable. Their occupational needs related to self-care (75%) and, to a lesser extent, productivity (15%) and leisure (10%). According to inpatients, rehabilitation process should firstly address self-care needs, followed by productivity and leisure problems.

Conclusions: Despite small sample size, this study described patterns of occupational needs in complex inpatients with stroke. These results will be implemented in client-centered rehabilitation programs to be tested in a phase-two trial. [NCT02173197]

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Priority occupational needs of complex inpatients with stroke during rehabilitation are focused on self-care area.

  • Productivity and leisure problems also arise in early post-acute phase.

  • Client-centered rehabilitation programs should firstly address self-care needs and, later on, they should also focus on the recovery of family and social roles.

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13.
Purpose: New rehabilitation strategies for post-stroke upper limb rehabilitation employing visual stimulation show promising results, however, cost-efficient and clinically feasible ways to provide these interventions are still lacking. An integral step is to translate recent technological advances, such as in virtual and augmented reality, into therapeutic practice to improve outcomes for patients. This requires research on the adaptation of the technology for clinical use as well as on the appropriate guidelines and protocols for sustainable integration into therapeutic routines. Here, we present and evaluate a novel and affordable augmented reality system (Augmented Reflection Technology, ART) in combination with a validated mirror therapy protocol for upper limb rehabilitation after stroke.

Method: We evaluated components of the therapeutic intervention, from the patients’ and the therapists’ points of view in a clinical feasibility study at a rehabilitation centre. We also assessed the integration of ART as an adjunct therapy for the clinical rehabilitation of subacute patients at two different hospitals.

Results: The results showed that the combination and application of the Berlin Protocol for Mirror Therapy together with ART was feasible for clinical use. This combination was integrated into the therapeutic plan of subacute stroke patients at the two clinical locations where the second part of this research was conducted.

Conclusions: Our findings pave the way for using technology to provide mirror therapy in clinical settings and show potential for the more effective use of inpatient time and enhanced recoveries for patients.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Computerised Mirror Therapy is feasible for clinical use

  • Augmented Reflection Technology can be integrated as an adjunctive therapeutic intervention for subacute stroke patients in an inpatient setting

  • Virtual Rehabilitation devices such as Augmented Reflection Technology have considerable potential to enhance stroke rehabilitation

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14.
Purpose: The home-based rehabilitation of elderly patients improves their autonomy, independence and reintegration into society. Hence, a suitable environment plays an important role in rehabilitation, as do different assistance technologies. The majority of accidents at home involving elderly people occur in the bathroom. Therefore, the planning of the layout of facilities is important in this potentially dangerous area. This paper proposes an approach towards designing and optimizing the layout of facilities in the bathroom, based on logistical and nonlogistical relationships.

Methodology: A fuzzy-based analytical hierarchical process (fuzzy-AHP) is then proposed for a comprehensive evaluation of the alternatives for this layout plan. This approach was applied to the home of a 71 years old female patient, who was experiencing home-based rehabilitation. After the initial designing and optimizing of the layout of the facilities in her bathroom, a plan could then be created for her particular needs.

Findings: The results of this research could then enable the home-based rehabilitation of elderly patients to be more effective.

Value: This paper develops a new approach to design and optimize the layout of facilities in bathroom for the elderly.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Develop a new approach to design and optimize the layout of facilities in bathroom.

  • Provide a mathematical and more scientific approach to home layout design for home-based rehabilitation.

  • Provide new opportunities for research, for both the therapist and the patient to analyse the home facility layout.

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15.
Purpose: A paradigm shift is taking place in pediatric rehabilitation research, practice, and policy – a shift towards the real-life contexts of clients rather than requiring clients to navigate the world of pediatric rehabilitation. This article proposes a conceptual framework to bring about a broader awareness of clients’ lives and transactional processes of change over the life course.

Method: The framework draws attention to transactional processes by which individuals, situated in life contexts, change and adapt over the life course and, in turn, influence their contextual settings and broader environments. This framework is based on (a) basic tenets derived from foundational theories taking a life course perspective to change, and (b) transactional processes identified from relevant pediatric rehabilitation models that bring these foundational theories into the pediatric rehabilitation sphere.

Results: The framework identifies three types of transactional processes relevant to pediatric rehabilitation: facilitative, resiliency, and socialization processes. These processes describe how contexts and people mutually influence each other via opportunities and situated experiences, thus facilitating capacity, adaptation to adversity, and socialization to new roles and life transitions.

Conclusions: The utility of the framework is considered for research, practice, service organizations, and policy.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • The framework supports practitioners going beyond person and environment as separate entities, to provide services to the “situated person” in real-life contexts

  • The framework shifts the focus from “body structures/functions” and “person in activity” to “person in changing and challenging life contexts”

  • Working from a transactional perspective, practitioner-client conversations will change; practitioners will view client situations through a lens of opportunities and experiences, assess client experiences in real-life contexts, and strive to create context-based therapy opportunities

  • The framework suggests the benefit of greater focus on resiliency processes to support client self-efficacy, self-determination, and autonomy, and socialization processes to enhance ability to enact new life roles at times of transition

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16.
Purpose: This report aims to assess the safety and feasibility of using an interdisciplinary rehabilitation intervention for a future randomized controlled trial in patients with gliomas in the initial treatment phase.

Method: We conducted an outpatient two-part rehabilitation intervention that involved six weeks of therapeutic supervised training (part one) and six weeks of unsupervised training in a local gym following a training protocol (part two).

Results: Predefined feasibility objectives of safety (100%), consent rate (>80%), drop-out (<20%), adherence (>80%) and patient satisfaction (>80%) was achieved at part one. However, the failure to meet predefined feasibility objectives of drop-out, adherence and patient satisfaction of the unsupervised intervention at part two have led to a protocol revision for a future randomized controlled trial.

Conclusion: This study demonstrates that an intensive rehabilitation intervention of physical therapy and occupational therapy in the initial treatment phase of patients with gliomas whose Karnofsky performance status is ≥70 is safe and feasible, if relevant inclusion criteria and precautionary screening are made. With the revised protocol, we are confident that the foundation for conducting a successful randomized controlled trial among these vulnerable patients has been established.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Brain tumors constitute some of the most challenging cancer diagnoses presenting for rehabilitation intervention.

  • Patients with gliomas experiences limitations in physical functioning, cognition, and emotional wellbeing.

  • In a relatively small sample this study shows that supervised physical- and occupational therapy in patients with gliomas is safe and feasible in the initial treatment phase.

  • Patients with gliomas can potentially improve functioning through interdisciplinary rehabilitation

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17.
Purpose: Sensory enhancement techniques, like other compensatory strategies, aim to reduce dysphagia symptoms. The use of carbonated liquids has been proposed as a possible sensory technique, however to date, there is limited information of its efficacy or guidance for clinical implementation. A narrative synthesis was completed to determine the quality and strength of the evidence base for use of carbonation as a compensatory strategy in dysphagia rehabilitation.

Methods: From 101 articles initially identified, 14 articles met the study criteria. Eleven papers described the effects of carbonation on swallowing in healthy participants whereas three described the impact of carbonation in dysphagic populations. A narrative synthesis of papers was undertaken given the diversity of identified studies.

Results: Synthesis of findings was challenging given the exploratory phase of most research activity with diverse populations described and extensive differences in research methodologies. There is currently weak, but potentially positive evidence to support using carbonation as a compensatory technique in dysphagia rehabilitation.

Conclusion: Despite future potential, existing evidence fails to provide clear direction for the clinical implementation of carbonation. Validation of carbonation use with the dysphagic population requires further research with consistent, controlled methodologies, and larger cohorts of participants to inform potential for dysphagia rehabilitation.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • The use of carbonated liquids has been proposed as a possible sensory enhancement technique which may facilitate changes to swallow physiology.

  • However to date, there is limited information to direct clinical implementation.

  • This paper provides a narrative synthesis of existing knowledge and highlights possible limitations of findings reported.

  • Research to date has used disparate research methodologies in varied populations making synthesis of current findings challenging.

  相似文献   

18.
Purpose: To describe the population and functional changes observed after an inpatient rehabilitation facility stay in chordoma patients

Materials and Methods: We conducted a consecutive series retrospective review of patients with chordoma, admitted to an academic inpatient rehabilitation facility after surgical resection from 2010 to 2015. Information regarding demographic, tumor- and surgery-specific data, lengths of stay, complications, admission and discharge functional independence measure scores was collected.

Results: A total of 40 patients with a diagnosis of chordoma were admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation facility postoperatively were included for analysis. Thirty-three patients had initial resection of chordoma, seven patients had resection of recurrent chordoma, and eight patients had metastatic disease on admission to an inpatient rehabilitation facility. The average change in total and motor functional independence measure scores after an inpatient rehabilitation facility stay was 33.7 and 26.1, respectively. The acute hospital transfer rate was 32.5% and the postoperative complication rate was 62.5%.

Conclusions: This study is the first to describe the population and functional improvement in the chordoma population who are admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation facility postoperatively. While there is a high rate of acute hospital transfer and postoperative complications, these values are comparable to prior studies in this population. With the increasing prevalence of cancer survivors, improving function during and after cancer treatment is extremely important.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Chordoma patients who are admitted to inpatient rehabilitation facilities after surgical tumor resection experience improvement in multiple functional domains.

  • Chordoma patients admitted to inpatient rehabilitation facilities experience a high rate of acute hospital transfer, but it is comparable to other cancer rehabilitation populations.

  • Understanding the characteristics of the postoperative chordoma population is essential to direct future studies regarding cancer rehabilitation.

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19.
Purpose: To describe what patients with chronic pain expect from a multimodal pain rehabilitation programme.

Material and method: Qualitative interviews were used to uncover expectations about a multimodal rehabilitation programme offered at the Pain and Rehabilitations Centre, The University Hospital; Linköping, Sweden. Sixteen women and two men (mean age 37 years; standard deviation 10 years) with chronic benign pain participated. The interviews were analysed using qualitative content analyses.

Results: To participate actively in the multimodal pain rehabilitation programme and to learn adequate coping strategies to improve daily life emerged as a main category. It was based on the following four categories comprising expectations about: participating actively in the programme, interacting with the professionals and fellow patients, cognitive effects of the programme and tools for coping, and explicit effects from the programme.

Conclusions: Many patients expressed expectations which may reflect that the information before the programme had started rehabilitation process at the time point for this study. The results could be applied in rehabilitation programmes by acknowledging expectations to interact with professional team members and fellow patients, by early addressing of positive and negative expectations about the future pain and by incorporating and strengthen expectations of learning to cope with pain.

  • Implications for Rehabilitation
  • Patients' expectations to interact with professional team members and fellow patients by participating actively in the pain rehabilitation programme should be acknowledged in each rehabilitation situation.

  • Patients expressed both positive and negative expectations about their future pain situation and these expectations should be addressed as early as possible in the rehabilitation screening process.

  • Patients' expectations of learning to cope with pain should be incorporated and strengthened in multimodal pain rehabilitation programmes.

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20.
Background: Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a rare genetic disorder characterized by decreased bone mass and increased bone fragility. Despite increasing research on the biomedical aspects of the disease, only a few studies focus on the psychosocial implications of living with OI. This study aimed to explore the situations that are perceived by OI type-1 children, their parents and siblings, as being the most distressing and stressful in their experience with the disease.

Methods: Seven families of children diagnosed with OI type 1 for longer than four years participated. An in-depth semistructured interview with open-ended questions was used to separately collect each participant’s (mother, father, patient and sibling) subjective report of their experience. Interviews were audiotaped and a qualitative discourse analysis was performed.

Results: Pain and fractures, hospitalization, home recovery, back to school and time of diagnosis emerged as the most challenging situations. Time of diagnosis was only mentioned by parents. Some commonalities but also relevant differences in the subjective experience of the same situations, depending on the family role, were found.

Conclusions: Our results reinforce the assumption that OI is a family matter and point to the importance of providing comprehensive and family-centered health and educational services tailored to each family member and to the different situations faced by these families.

  • Implications for rehabilitation
  • Osteogenesis imperfecta is a chronic rare disease that impacts severely the patient’s life and the life of all family members.

  • The most distressing situations are related to fractures and pain, hospitalization, recovery from fractures while being at home and preparing for school reentry.

  • All family members participate in the rehabilitation process, each one accomplishing different tasks.

  • Rehabilitation should include educational and psychological intervention to enhance family strengths and support all family members.

  • Tailored and effective communication from health providers may play a critical role in the rehabilitation process.

  相似文献   

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