Web of Science: 21 citations, Scopus: 26 citations, Google Scholar: citations,
Three measures of physical rehabilitation effectiveness in elderly patients : a prospective, longitudinal, comparative analysis
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Dolores (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Medicina)
Miralles, Ramon (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Medicina)
Muniesa, Josep M. (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Medicina)
Mojal, Sergio (Institut Hospital del Mar d'Investigacions Mèdiques)
Abadía-Escartín, Anna (Parc de Salut MAR de Barcelona)
Vázquez-Ibar, Olga (Parc de Salut MAR de Barcelona)

Date: 2015
Abstract: Rehabilitation success is measured by instruments that assess performance of activities of daily living. Guidelines on the use and choice of these instruments are lacking. The present study aimed to analyse prognostic indicators of physical rehabilitation effectiveness in elderly patients according to three rehabilitation impact indices. Prospective, longitudinal study in a post-acute care unit. The study included rehabilitation-eligible deconditioned elderly in-patients prospectively admitted to post-acute care (n = 685, aged 83. 2 ± 8. 3 years, mean length of stay 15 ± 9. 2 days). Data Collection: Premorbid health status variables (PHSV): age, sex, comorbidity (Charlson index), medical history (heart failure, pulmonary disease, cerebrovascular disease, dementia), previous living situation and pre-admission functional status (premorbid Lawton and Barthel indices). Admission health status variables (AHSV): main diagnoses, referral source, physical (Barthel-adm) and cognitive function (Pfeiffer test), undernutrition and dysphagia. Outcome Measures: Absolute functional gain (AFG, admission-to-discharge Barthel change), relative functional gain (RFG, achieved percentage of potential gain) and rehabilitation efficiency index (REI, AFG over length of stay). Univariate analysis considered these parameters, along with PHSV and AHSV. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was performed for AFG ≥20, RFG ≥35 % and REI ≥ 0. 50. Greater AFG was associated with 14 variables, 8 PHSV (57. 1 %) and 6 AHSV (42. 8 %); greater RFG with 9 variables, 3 PHSV (33. 3 %) and 6 AHSV (66. 6 %); and REI with 9 variables, 4 PHSV (44. 4 %) and 5 AHSV (55. 5 %). Mean AFG value was 34. 5 ± 15. 8 in patients who achieved complete recovery (RFG 100 %, n = 189, 27. 5 %) and 35. 3 ± 15. 0 (p = 0. 593) in the remaining patients (n = 311, 45. 4 %). In multivariate analysis, only Barthel-adm was related to all three rehabilitation impact indices. Both premorbid and acute-process variables have a greater impact on AFG and REI, compared to RFG. Although AFG gives information about the degree of reduction in dependence, it does not provide clinical information about post-rehabilitation functional status (mean AFG values did not differ between patients with and without complete recovery). A future implication for evaluating rehabilitation effectiveness in elderly patients is to recommend RFG corrected by premorbid Barthel score, which is less affected by previous health conditions, as the optimum method to assess the degree to which maximum potential improvement was achieved.
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Language: Anglès
Document: Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Subject: Geriatric rehabilitation ; Functional recovery ; Elderly ; Rehabilitation impact index ; Post-acute
Published in: BMC geriatrics, Vol. 15 (october 2015) , ISSN 1471-2318

DOI: 10.1186/s12877-015-0138-5
PMID: 26515028


11 p, 447.2 KB

The record appears in these collections:
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2022-02-07, last modified 2023-11-16



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