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1.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 429-438, 2014.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-375839

RESUMO

Objective : To investigate how rehabilitation outcomes improved after the rehabilitation plan was changed. Subjects : 54 patients that were admitted to a kaifukuki rehabilitation ward in a regional hospital from January 2007 to June 2007 and 679 patients that admitted from January 2008 to June 2011. Methods : We changed the rehabilitation plan as follows to improve rehabilitation outcomes. Physiatrists estimated the rehabilitation goal and the length of hospital stay (LOS) at the first examination. All patients had intensive rehabilitation with standing up exercises and ADL training toward the goal. LOS, Functional Independence Measure (FIM) gain, FIM efficiency and the percentage of patients discharged home during 6 months before the change were compared with those during the same period after the change. In stroke patients, hip fracture patients and deconditioned patients, the same comparison was performed. Results : In the 4 years after the change was initiated, LOS was reduced significantly from 96.5 days to 29.2 days (<i>p</i><0.001). The change of FIM gain was not significant, but FIM efficiency increased significantly from 0.22 to 0.91 (<i>p</i><0.001). The percentage of patients discharged home also increased significantly from 85.2% to 99.1% (<i>p</i><0.001). Also in stroke patients and hip fracture patients, LOS was reduced and FIM efficiency was increased significantly. The sample of deconditioned patients was small, but their LOS was reduced significantly. Conclusion : The changed rehabilitation plan reduced LOS, increased FIM efficiency and enabled most patients to discharge home.

2.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 224-231, 2012.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-374198

RESUMO

Our hospital is located in the prefectural capitol of Fukushima, where tremors just below magnitude six were recorded during the Great East Japan Earthquake of March 11, 2011. The building was spared major damage, but for safety, patients hospitalized at the Kaifukuki rehabilitation ward were evacuated within the hospital to rehabilitation rooms in the new annex, where they spent two nights. The day after the earthquake, a group rehabilitation session was conducted, but because patients showed signs of exhaustion from lack of sleep and anxiety, it was switched to individual rehabilitation. On a questionnaire, many patients noted that conversations with the staff helped ease their anxiety. This suggests that, although group rehabilitation can be efficient and effective in providing psychological support to patients, individual rehabilitation tends to be more favorable in disaster situations where patients suffer from exhaustion and psychological stress. Accordingly, disaster rehabilitation should be conducted on a patient-by-patient basis. In comparison with patients from the same time the previous year, the number of rehabilitation intervention units per day was one less, but the period of hospitalization was longer. A similar improvement in FIM was also achieved. At the time of an earthquake, although it is important for hospitals that escape structural damage to accept new patients, it is also important to continue treating the patients who were already there. Furthermore, hospitals should always have stockpiles of meals on hand and form cooperative relationships with the community to ensure that they can continue to provide service after an earthquake.

3.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 224-231, 2010.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-362254

RESUMO

After April 2006, the Japanese Ministry of Health and Labor raised the permitted training time from 6 to 9 units (1 unit of training time corresponds to 20 minutes of exercise with a therapist) for patients in a kaifukuki (convalescent) rehabilitation ward. We examined the effect of the increased rehabilitative training time on patients using feeding tubes in a kaifukuki rehabilitation ward after an initial cerebrovascular disorder, with a particular focus on improving swallowing disorders. Our study was comprised of post-stroke patients with feeding tubes who underwent rehabilitation from April 2001 to March 2006 (<i>N</i>=14, 6-unit group) and from April 2006 to March 2009 (<i>N</i>=16, 9-unit group). All patients went to the ward within two months after suffering a stroke. There was no significant difference in the Functional Independence Measure(FIM) efficiency or length of hospital stay between the two groups. Feeding tube removal was more common in the 9-unit group compared to the 6-unit group (81.3% vs. 35.7%, <i>p</i><0.05), and the 9-unit group also had more training time per day. Logistic regression analysis showed that the increased training time per day spent with a speech therapist contributed to improving swallowing disorders (<i>p</i><0.01).

4.
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 799-807, 2009.
Artigo em Japonês | WPRIM | ID: wpr-362244

RESUMO

Currently, there are more than 53,000 beds in kaifukuki rehabilitation wards throughout Japan. The development of kaifukuki rehabilitation wards is proceeding smoothly in terms of quantity. It is suggested that, with this development, the activities of daily living of patients will significantly improve, leading to an increase in the likelihood of patients returning home when a large unit of daily rehabilitation training is provided via one of these kaifukuki rehabilitation wards. The tasks remaining to be completed for the optimal realization of the kaifukuki rehabilitation wards are to reduce the disparity in the number of beds among prefectures, to realize a mature team approach to the rehabilitation program, to encourage full-time ward physicians of the rehabilitation department to exercise leadership, to enhance subacute medical services, to enhance human resources such as nurses and rehabilitation specialists and to improve the education and training system for the staff. Other major tasks remaining are to strengthen the cooperation between kaifukuki rehabilitation wards and acute hospitals, by which such rehabilitation wards will become capable of actively accepting patients from an early stage, and to establish cooperation between kaifukuki rehabilitation wards and the home care system.

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