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INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY

OBJECTIVE: Return-to-work is often the most important objective of working-age patients with acquired brain injury, but is often difficult to achieve. There is a lack of evidence for effective treatment. This study aimed to assess the benefit of a multi-disciplinary neurorehabilitation in a daytime...

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Autores principales: MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela, DURAND, Amandine, ABOULAFIA BRAKHA, Tatiana, SCHNIDER, Armin, GUGGISBERG, Adrian G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medical Journals Sweden AB 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9533331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35861581
http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/jrm.v54.416
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author MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela
DURAND, Amandine
ABOULAFIA BRAKHA, Tatiana
SCHNIDER, Armin
GUGGISBERG, Adrian G.
author_facet MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela
DURAND, Amandine
ABOULAFIA BRAKHA, Tatiana
SCHNIDER, Armin
GUGGISBERG, Adrian G.
author_sort MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Return-to-work is often the most important objective of working-age patients with acquired brain injury, but is often difficult to achieve. There is a lack of evidence for effective treatment. This study aimed to assess the benefit of a multi-disciplinary neurorehabilitation in a daytime hospital on return-to-work after an acquired brain injury. DESIGN: Retrospective case-control study. PATIENTS: Acquired brain injury patients between 18 and 65 years of age. METHODS: Two periods, before (n = 82 patients) and after (n = 89 patients) the implementation of a daytime hospital in our neuro-rehabilitation unit were compared. Patients followed in the daytime hospital received intensive, interdisciplinary, coordinated, individual and group-level physical, cognitive, and vocational rehabilitation. During the control period, patients received outpatient neurorehabilitation with less intensive treatment without interdisciplinary coordination. The main outcome was the proportion of patients returning to > 50% of their premorbid work activity. RESULTS: Fifty-five percent of patients were able to resume more than 50% of their premorbid work level in the daytime hospital period vs 41% in the control period (p = 0.076). CONCLUSION: Intensive and coordinated outpatient neurorehabilitation may facilitate return-to-work after an acquired brain injury. LAY ABSTRACT Acquired brain injury is a common health issue, most frequently caused by head trauma or stroke. Acquired brain injury patients of working age often have difficulties in returning to work, which greatly impairs their quality of life. They often receive insufficient rehabilitation care, partly also because of a lack of evidence regarding intensive rehabilitation in this patient group. This study aimed to assess the benefit of multi-disciplinary neurorehabilitation in a daytime hospital on return-to-work after acquired brain injury. The study compared the rate of return-to-work during the first 2 years after implementation of a daytime hospital to a control period of 2 years before. The daytime hospital provided intensive, interdisciplinary, coordinated, individual and group-level physical, cognitive, and vocational rehabilitation. During the control period, patients received outpatient neurorehabilitation with less intensive treatment without interdisciplinary coordination. The results show that more patients were able to resume work, at more than 50% of their premorbid work level, since the introduction of the daytime hospital.
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spelling pubmed-95333312022-10-14 INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela DURAND, Amandine ABOULAFIA BRAKHA, Tatiana SCHNIDER, Armin GUGGISBERG, Adrian G. J Rehabil Med Original Report OBJECTIVE: Return-to-work is often the most important objective of working-age patients with acquired brain injury, but is often difficult to achieve. There is a lack of evidence for effective treatment. This study aimed to assess the benefit of a multi-disciplinary neurorehabilitation in a daytime hospital on return-to-work after an acquired brain injury. DESIGN: Retrospective case-control study. PATIENTS: Acquired brain injury patients between 18 and 65 years of age. METHODS: Two periods, before (n = 82 patients) and after (n = 89 patients) the implementation of a daytime hospital in our neuro-rehabilitation unit were compared. Patients followed in the daytime hospital received intensive, interdisciplinary, coordinated, individual and group-level physical, cognitive, and vocational rehabilitation. During the control period, patients received outpatient neurorehabilitation with less intensive treatment without interdisciplinary coordination. The main outcome was the proportion of patients returning to > 50% of their premorbid work activity. RESULTS: Fifty-five percent of patients were able to resume more than 50% of their premorbid work level in the daytime hospital period vs 41% in the control period (p = 0.076). CONCLUSION: Intensive and coordinated outpatient neurorehabilitation may facilitate return-to-work after an acquired brain injury. LAY ABSTRACT Acquired brain injury is a common health issue, most frequently caused by head trauma or stroke. Acquired brain injury patients of working age often have difficulties in returning to work, which greatly impairs their quality of life. They often receive insufficient rehabilitation care, partly also because of a lack of evidence regarding intensive rehabilitation in this patient group. This study aimed to assess the benefit of multi-disciplinary neurorehabilitation in a daytime hospital on return-to-work after acquired brain injury. The study compared the rate of return-to-work during the first 2 years after implementation of a daytime hospital to a control period of 2 years before. The daytime hospital provided intensive, interdisciplinary, coordinated, individual and group-level physical, cognitive, and vocational rehabilitation. During the control period, patients received outpatient neurorehabilitation with less intensive treatment without interdisciplinary coordination. The results show that more patients were able to resume work, at more than 50% of their premorbid work level, since the introduction of the daytime hospital. Medical Journals Sweden AB 2022-09-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9533331/ /pubmed/35861581 http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/jrm.v54.416 Text en © Published by Medical Journals Sweden, on behalf of the Foundation for Rehabilitation Information https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/)
spellingShingle Original Report
MORENO LEGAST, Gabriela
DURAND, Amandine
ABOULAFIA BRAKHA, Tatiana
SCHNIDER, Armin
GUGGISBERG, Adrian G.
INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title_full INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title_fullStr INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title_full_unstemmed INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title_short INTENSIVE MULTI-DISCIPLINARY OUTPATIENT REHABILITATION FOR FACILITATING RETURN-TO-WORK AFTER ACQUIRED BRAIN INJURY: A CASE-CONTROL STUDY
title_sort intensive multi-disciplinary outpatient rehabilitation for facilitating return-to-work after acquired brain injury: a case-control study
topic Original Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9533331/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35861581
http://dx.doi.org/10.2340/jrm.v54.416
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