Although FAR and DER did not differ in physical measures or activity levels from EER and AR, they demonstrated poor lower back-related health at baseline and after intervention. Thus, future research should elucidate as to which additional interventions could optimize their health.
Employers' differentiated expectations and reservations towards hiring individuals with specific disabilities need to be taken into account to increase employment for people with intellectual disability.
The study demonstrated that the comprehensive ICF core set classification for chronic low back pain is influenced by age and gender. This impact is relevant for ICF-based assessments in clinical practice, and should be considered in intervention planning for rehabilitative programs. Implications for rehabilitation It is important to consider age and gender differences when classifying with the ICF. The intervention planning based on the ICF should focus on improvement of bodily functioning and mobility in older patients, facilitation of household activities in women, consideration of work-life balance and recreation (e.g., through mindfulness based stress reduction), and reduction of dissatisfaction with rehabilitation in younger patients. It is important to offer patients the opportunity to participate in intervention planning based on the ICF. For intervention planning professionals should bear in mind the resource-oriented approach of the ICF (e.g., facilitation through environmental factors), and a collaboration with other professionals.
Recognizing and addressing spiritual needs has long been identified as a key component of palliative care (PC). More often than not, the provision of spiritual care involves referral to a hospital chaplain. In this study, we aim to describe the role of a PC chaplain embedded within the interdisciplinary PC team and demonstrate how this palliative chaplain role differs from that of a traditional hospital chaplain. We postulate that integrating spiritual care provision into a PC team may offer a broader spiritual care experience for patients receiving PC and begin to delineate expanded clinical roles for the palliative chaplain.
In the face of the trend toward brief hospitalization, rising re-admission rates and other indices of poor community adjustment, concern has developed about the adequacy of psychiatric aftercare services. The authors report on a comprehensive study of psychiatric aftercare in a large metropolitan area (population 2.5 million). The study followed prospectively a group of 747 patients, representative of a significant proportion of patients in the care system. The findings document inadequacies in hospital-based discharge planning, unbalanced use of aftercare services and poor patient outcomes six months and two years post-discharge. The study found heavy reliance on medical/therapeutic aftercare services with a relative neglect of housing, vocational/educational, financial and social/recreational services. Despite the large volume of medical/therapeutic service use, the patient group had a high readmission rate, high levels of symptomatology and poor social adjustment on follow-up. The authors suggest that community-based practitioners with specialized training in psychiatric rehabilitation would improve the system of aftercare.
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