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An Investigation of the Oral Intake Recovery Rate as Defined by the 2014 Medical Treatment Reward Revision in Japan / The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine ; : 713-719, 2015.
Article in Japanese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-377215
ABSTRACT

Objective:

The 2014 Medical Treatment Reward Revision in Japan newly defines the oral intake recovery rate and requires a change of more than 35% to calculate various additions and subtractions. We calculated the recovery rate in various diseases and clarified some inherent problems.

Methods:

From April 2012 to March 2014, we retrospectively investigated the age, sex, removal rate from nasal nutrition or gastric fistula, oral intake recovery rate and days until removal of 286 inpatients with nasal nutrition or gastric fistula for dysphagia.

Results:

The removal rates for stroke, brain injury, oral and laryngopharyngeal cancer and other diseases were nearly always more than 50% because the disease did not cause dysphagia directly or the rehabilitation was effective for treating the remaining dysphagia. But the removal rates for neurodegenerative disease, complications due to stroke and brain injury in the chronic phase and respiratory disease did not reach 35% because the previous dysphagia progressed or actualized. Almost all oral intake recovery rates did not extend to 35% for exclusion of oral intake recovery within one month.

Conclusion:

The criteria of oral intake recovery rate needs to be reviewed in respect to setting goals to match the patient's underlying disease and to evaluate the possibility for early rehabilitation.

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine Year: 2015 Type: Article

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Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Language: Japanese Journal: The Japanese Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine Year: 2015 Type: Article