Trajectories of Functional Change After Inpatient Rehabilitation for Traumatic Brain Injury
To examine trajectories of functional recovery after rehabilitation for traumatic brain injury (TBI). Prospective study. Inpatient rehabilitation hospitals in the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation. A subset of individuals receiving inpatient rehabilitation services for TBI from 2002 to...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation 2017-08, Vol.98 (8), p.1606-1613 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To examine trajectories of functional recovery after rehabilitation for traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Prospective study.
Inpatient rehabilitation hospitals in the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation.
A subset of individuals receiving inpatient rehabilitation services for TBI from 2002 to 2010 who also had postdischarge measurement of functional independence (N=16,583).
Inpatient rehabilitation.
Admission, discharge, and follow-up data were obtained from the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation. We used latent class mixture models to examine recovery trajectories for both cognitive and motor functioning as measured by the FIM instrument.
Latent class models identified 3 trajectories (low, medium, high) for both cognitive and motor FIM subscales. Factors associated with membership in the low cognition trajectory group included younger age, male sex, racial/ethnic minority, Medicare or Medicaid (vs commercial or other insurance), comorbid conditions, and greater duration from injury date to rehabilitation admission date. Factors associated with membership in the low motor trajectory group included older age, racial/ethnic minority, Medicare or Medicaid coverage, comorbid conditions, open head injury, and greater duration to admission.
Standard approaches to assessing recovery patterns after TBI obscure differences between subgroups with trajectories that differ from the overall mean. Select demographic and clinical characteristics can help classify patients with TBI into distinct functional recovery trajectories, which can enhance both patient-centered care and quality improvement efforts.
•Substantial heterogeneity exists in recovery patterns after traumatic brain injury.•Lower gains in motor and cognitive FIM ratings were associated with black and Hispanic ethnicities.•Increased days from onset to inpatient rehabilitation admission were associated with reduced motor and cognitive FIM ratings. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9993 1532-821X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apmr.2017.03.009 |