When most people hear they need “rehabilitation” it is common tendency to think “physical therapy” but in reality it is much more. Rehabilitation is a wide variety of medical, psychological and physiological services to help one restore good health, function, strength, mobility and cognitive ability and usefulness in society.

Rehabilitation services are typically ordered by a doctor to help a patient recover from an illness or injury. Nurses, physical, occupational, and speech therapists, social workers or case managers, and other health care professionals provide these services.

Rehabilitation is critical to the healing process and often serves as an extension of a greater health care plan. For patients well enough to be discharged from the hospital, but are not yet ready to return home, inpatient rehabilitative care offers a safe and supportive transition.

Your rehabilitation team is comprised of experts that work together to devise, implement and monitor therapy plans tailored to the specific needs of each patient. This multidisciplinary approach fosters active participation and helps ensure the highest level of physical, emotional and psychological support so patients can successfully advance through the rehab process.

Another important part of the team and rehabilitation process is having a strong support network. Most healthcare professionals agree this is crucial to maintaining results achieved through a formal rehabilitation program. As such, your family and caregivers will likely be invited to join the rehab team. The support and assistance they can provide during the rehab process and after discharge from the rehabilitation facility can help ensure long-term success.

Common Rehabilitation Therapies

In addition to healthcare therapies, rehabilitation can also include recreational therapy, pet therapy, and support groups, depending on the condition of the patient.

Before beginning a rehabilitation program it is important for patients and their caregivers to know what performance outcomes to expect and to establish realistic goals, according to a study published in Annals of Long-term Care. These questions might include:

It is important for patients to know change doesn’t happen overnight. Setting realistic goals helps patients—and their caregivers—to expect slow, steady progress and to better understand the steps, skills and support needed in reaching their goals.

The ARDS Foundation has offers a list of questions on their website patients or caregivers should ask in choosing a rehabilitation facility. http://www.ardsusa.org/inpatientrehab.htm

Sources:

The Glossary of Managed Care & Health Terminology, accessed online at http://www.pohly.com/terms_r.html

National Center for Rehabilitation Research (NCMRR). Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development website, part of the National Institutes of Health. Accessed at http://www.nichd.nih.gov/about/org/ncmrr/

National Institutes of Health Clinical Center website, accessed at http://clinicalcenter.nih.gov/rmd/

National Rehabilitation Hospital Field Guide. Choosing A High Quality Medical Rehabilitation Program. Available online at: http://www.naric.com/public/choosingquality.pdf

Patient and Caregiver Rehabilitation Questions. Eric M. Coleman MD, MPH, and Peter D. Fox, PhD on behalf of the HMO Care Management Workgroup, Published in the Annals of Long-term Care, Vol. 12, No. 10, Oct. 2004. Accessed online at: http://www.annalsoflongtermcare.com/article/3409?page=0,3