Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3448881 | Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2013 | 10 Pages |
ObjectiveTo describe therapist-reported factors affecting therapy sessions in spinal cord injury (SCI) inpatient rehabilitation and explore their impact on the patient's rehabilitation program.DesignProspective observational longitudinal cohort design. Data were obtained from systematic recordings of interventions by clinicians and from medical record abstraction.SettingSix inpatient rehabilitation programs.ParticipantsPatients (N=1376) with traumatic SCI admitted for initial rehabilitation.InterventionsNot applicable.Main Outcome MeasuresFactors recorded as impacting the objective or content of treatment sessions by physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, and therapeutic recreation, patients' participation in treatment as rated using a modified Pittsburgh Rehabilitation Participation Scale (PRPS), length of stay (LOS), medical morbidity measured using the Comprehensive Severity Index, hours of therapy per week, and missed therapy minutes.ResultsPatients received 151,172 treatment sessions from 483 therapists. Pain, fatigue, and spasticity were commonly reported factors; other medical, behavioral, and logistical factors were also frequent, with 30% of sessions being affected by at least 1 factor. The number of factors was correlated with missed therapy minutes and with the PRPS score. Patients with more reported factors, overall or per average session, had a longer LOS and fewer hours of treatment per week.ConclusionsMedical and other factors complicating therapy are common. Those who need a longer stay because of their injury level or for other reasons have more opportunity to have sessions affected, but having many treatment sessions impacted by 1 or more factors also is likely to increase LOS. The nature of these factors and their impact on rehabilitation processes and outcomes deserve further study.