Categories
- Medical Conditions
- Drugs and Medications (114)
- Fitness (41)
- Health Care (206)
- Medical Conditions (935)
- Medical Procedures (148)
- Medical Tests & Examinations (220)
- Recent Articles (10)
- Children Health
- Drugs and Medications (3)
- First Aid Measures (32)
- Medical Condition (59)
- Pediatric Articles (53)
- Health Recipes
- Cooking Instructions / Cooking Demo (2)
- Low Cholesterol (106)
- Low Cholesterol Salad (2)
- Slimmers (64)
- Vegetarian (64)
- Vegetarian Salad (3)
- Food Calories (970)
REHABILITATION
Definition
Rehabilitation is a
treatment or treatments designed to facilitate the process of recovery from
injury, illness, or disease to as normal a condition as
possible.
Purpose
The purpose of
rehabilitation is to restore some or all of the patient's physical, sensory, and
mental capabilities that were lost due to injury, illness, or disease.
Rehabilitation includes assisting the patient to compensate for deficits that
cannot be reversed medically. It is prescribed after many types of injury,
illness, or disease, including amputations, arthritis, cancer, cardiac
disease, neurological problems, orthopedic injuries, spinal cord injuries,
stroke, and traumatic brain injuries.The Institute of Medicine has
estimated that as many as 14% of all Americans may be disabled at any given
time.
Precautions
Rehabilitation
should be carried out only by qualified therapists. Exercises and other physical
interventions must take into account the patient's deficit. An example of a
deficit is the loss of a limb.
Description
A proper and
adequate rehabilitation program can reverse many disabling conditions or can
help patients cope with deficits that cannot be reversed by medical care.
Rehabilitation addresses the patient's physical, psychological, and
environmental needs. It is achieved by restoring the patient's physical
functions and/or modifying the patient's physical and social environment. The
main types of rehabilitation are physical, occupational, and speech
therapy.
Each rehabilitation
program is tailored to the individual patient's needs and can include one or
more types of therapy. The patient's physician usually coordinates the efforts
of the rehabilitation team, which can include physical, occupational, speech, or
other therapists; nurses; engineers; physiatrists (physical medicine);
psychologists; orthotists (makes devices such as braces to straighten out curved
or poorly shaped bones); prosthetists (a therapist who makes artificial limbs or
protheses); and vocational counselors. Family members are often actively
involved in the patient's rehabilitation program.
Physical therapy
Physical therapy
helps the patient restore the use of muscles, bones, and the nervous system
through the use of heat, cold, massage, whirlpool baths, ultrasound,
exercise, and other techniques. It seeks to relieve pain, improve
strength and mobility, and train the patient to perform important everyday
tasks. Physical therapy may be prescribed to rehabilitate a patient after
amputations, arthritis, burns, cancer, cardiac disease, cervical and
lumbar dysfunction, neurological problems, orthopedic injuries, pulmonary
disease, spinal cord injuries, stroke, traumatic brain injuries, and other
injuries/illnesses. The duration of the physical therapy program varies
depending on the injury/illness being treated and the patient's response to
therapy.
Exercise is the most
widely used and best known type of physical therapy. Depending on the patient's
condition, exercises may be performed by the patient alone or with the
therapist's help, or with the therapist moving the patient's limbs. Exercise
equipment for physical therapy could include an exercise table or mat, a
stationary bicycle, walking aids, a wheelchair, practice stairs, parallel bars,
and pulleys and weights.
Heat treatment,
applied with hot-water compresses, infrared lamps, short-wave radiation, high
frequency electrical current, ultrasound, paraffin wax, or warm baths, is used
to stimulate the patient's circulation, relax muscles, and relieve pain. Cold
treatment is applied with ice packs or cold-water soaking. Soaking in a
whirlpool can ease muscle spasm pain and help strengthen movements. Massage aids
circulation, helps the patient relax, relieves pain and muscle spasms, and
reduces swelling. Very low strength electrical currents applied through the skin
stimulate muscles and make them contract, helping paralyzed or weakened muscles
respond again.
Occupational therapy
Occupational therapy
helps the patient regain the ability to do normal everyday tasks. This may be
achieved by restoring old skills or teaching the patient new skills to adjust to
disabilities through adaptive equipment, orthotics, and modification of the
patient's home environment. Occupational therapy may be prescribed to
rehabilitate a patient after amputation, arthritis, cancer, cardiac
disease, head injuries, neurological injuries, orthopedic injuries, pulmonary
disease, spinal cord disease, stroke, and other injuries/illnesses. The duration
of the occupational therapy program varies depending on the injury/illness being
treated and the patient's response to therapy.
Occupational therapy
includes learning how to use devices to assist in walking (artificial limbs,
canes, crutches, walkers), getting around without walking (wheelchairs or
motorized scooters), or moving from one spot to another (boards, lifts, and
bars). The therapist will visit the patient's home and analyze what the patient
can and cannot do. Suggestions on modifications to the home, such as rearranging
furniture or adding a wheelchair ramp, will be made. Health aids to bathing and
grooming could also be recommended.
Speech therapy
Speech therapy helps
the patient correct speech disorders or restore speech. Speech therapy
may be prescribed to rehabilitate a patient after a brain injury, cancer,
neuromuscular diseases, stroke, and other injuries/illnesses. The duration of
the speech therapy program varies depending on the injury/illness being treated
and the patient's response to therapy.
Performed by a
speech pathologist, speech therapy involves regular meetings with the therapist
in an individual or group setting and home exercises. To strengthen muscles, the
patient might be asked to say words, smile, close his mouth, or stick out his
tongue. Picture cards may be used to help the patient remember everyday objects
and increase his vocabulary. The patient might use picture boards of everyday
activities or objects to communicate with others. Workbooks might be used to
help the patient recall the names of objects and practice reading, writing, and
listening. Computer programs are available to help sharpen speech, reading,
recall, and listening skills.
Other types of
therapists
Inhalation
therapists, audiologists, and registered dietitians are other types of
therapists. Inhalation therapists help the patient learn to use respirators and
other breathing aids to restore or support breathing. Audiologists help diagnose
the patient's hearing loss and recommend solutions. Dietitians provide
dietary advice to help the patient recover from or avoid specific problems or
diseases.
Rehabiltation centers
Rehabilitation
services are provided in a variety of settings including clinical and office
practices, hospitals, skilled-care nursing homes, sports medicine clinics, and
some health maintenance organizations. Some therapists make home visits. Advice
on choosing the appropriate type of therapy and therapist is provided by the
patient's medical team.
Key terms:
Orthotist
A health care
professional who is skilled in making and fitting orthopedic appliances.
Physiatrist
A physician
who specializes in physical medicine.
Prosthetist
A health care
professional who is skilled in making and fitting artificial parts (prosthetics)
for the human body.
| Link Partners | Cell Phone Collection | US Hospitals |
|