Early physical rehabilitation dosage in the IntensiveCare Unit predicts hospital outcomes after criticalCOVID-19.
Res Sq
; 2024 May 15.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38798477
ABSTRACT
Objective:
to examine the relationship between physical rehabilitation parameters including a novel approach to quantifying dosage with hospital outcomes for patients with critical COVID-19.Design:
Retrospective practice analysis from March 5, 2020, to April 15, 2021.Setting:
Intensive care units (ICU) at four medical institutions. Patients n = 3,780 adults with ICU admission and diagnosis of COVID-19.Interventions:
We measured the physical rehabilitation treatment delivered in ICU and patientoutcomes:
1) mortality; 2) discharge disposition; and 3) physical function at hospital discharge measured by the Activity Measure-Post Acute Care (AM-PAC) "6-Clicks" (6-24, 24=greater functional independence). Physical rehabilitation dosage was defined as the average mobility level scores in the first three sessions (a surrogate measure of intensity) multiplied by the rehabilitation frequency (PT + OT frequency in hospital). Measurements and MainResults:
The cohort was a mean 64 ± 16 years old, 41% female, mean BMI of 32 ± 9 kg/m2 and 46% (n=1739) required mechanical ventilation. For 2191 patients with complete data, rehabilitation dosage and AM-PAC at discharge were moderately, positively associated (Spearman's rho [r] = 0.484, p < 0.001). Multivariate linear regression (model adjusted R2= 0.68, p <0.001) demonstrates mechanical ventilation (ß = -0.86, p = 0.001), average mobility score in first three sessions (ß = 2.6, p <0.001) and physical rehabilitation dosage (ß = 0.22, p = 0.001) were predictive of AM-PAC scores at discharge when controlling for age, sex, BMI, and ICU LOS.Conclusions:
Greater physical rehabilitation exposure early in the ICU is associated with physical function at hospital discharge.
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Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Res Sq
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article