Litcius/Paper detail

Physical Rehabilitation and Mental Health Care After Burn Injury: A Multinational Study

Lewis E. Kazis, Alan Sager, Hannah M. Bailey, Ananya Vasudevan, Brigid Garrity, Ronald G. Tompkins

2021Journal of Burn Care & Research19 citationsDOI

Abstract

While remarkable improvements have been made to acute hospital burn care in recent decades, it is not matched by improvements in post-acute care, including physical rehabilitation and mental health. Progress in acute hospital treatment of burn survivors now highlights the next important step-addressing care once a patient leaves intensive treatment and is discharged to the community. Long-term physical rehabilitation and mental health services are vital to improving quality of life for burn survivors. Using qualitative methods, we apply an adapted Reeve framework to assess and compare post-acute physical rehabilitation and mental health care across 13 countries on 6 continents. Twenty semistructured interviews were conducted with burn surgeons and rehabilitation specialists. One major theme that emerged was the importance of training and resources to the quality of post-acute care. This exploratory study suggests the value of investing scarce resources in a range of low-cost interventions to improve follow-up burn care. One intervention identified here is short-term training in post-acute rehabilitation and mental health to upgrade and standardize best clinical practices to address as-yet unmet post-discharge needs of burn survivors.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRehabilitationMental healthAcute carePsychological interventionHealth careQuality of life (healthcare)NursingPhysical therapyPsychiatryEconomic growthEconomicsBurn Injury Management and OutcomesInjury Epidemiology and PreventionWound Healing and Treatments
Physical Rehabilitation and Mental Health Care After Burn Injury: A Multinational Study | Litcius