Home rehabilitation for stroke patients cuts hospital stays in half

| July 31, 2012 | 0 Comments

Home rehabilitation for stroke victims

Stroke patients can now go home sooner thanks to the Stroke Early Supported Discharge Program.

Survivors of mild to moderate strokes can now leave hospital sooner thanks to a home rehabilitation program called The Stroke Early Supported Discharge Program.

Alberta Health Services says the program makes available home rehabilitation teams that help restore a stroke victim’s abilities, confidence and independence.

The Stroke Early Supported Discharge Program, now in its second year, brings therapy to stroke survivors who experience significant disability that challenges independent living.

“The fact that this is a multidisciplinary team — physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy and social work — makes it extremely valuable for our clients,” said Program Team Manager Kris Gray.

 

Please help us serve you better by filling out this brief survey form. We thank you for your feedback and your commitment to local online news.

 

“We’re well-rounded in all the rehab disciplines. We work closely together to ensure a positive result. Any part of their independence that we can help them reclaim is a victory for both the clients and the team.”

Over the past year, the program helped more than 200 stroke patients head home, on average, after two weeks in hospital, compared to a typical stay of four weeks or more.

At any given time, the program oversees the rehabilitation of 16 to 20 clients. This also helps to free up capacity in stroke outpatient programs.

“We don’t have a wait list,” said Program Team Leader Jodi Roberts. “That would defeat the purpose of what we’re all about. Many people, when they’re discharged from hospital and on their own, are not able to get back to the way they were living before their stroke. It’s hugely important for them to be able to do the things they value on their own, whenever they want to, whether it’s brushing their teeth or cooking their own meals.”

“We work on getting them back into the activities they enjoyed doing before, back into a normal life,” said Roberts. “When they find out that we’re going to be there to provide rehab as soon as they get home from hospital, they’re relieved. They feel much better.”

Many of these patients may also face barriers that prevent them from attending outpatient rehabilitation, such as mobility issues or a loss of endurance or stamina.

Referrals to the Stroke Early Supported Discharge Program come from four Edmonton hospitals that have a stroke program: Royal Alexandra, University of Alberta, Grey Nuns and the Glenrose Rehabilitation Hospital. At present, the program is only available to residents who live in the city of Edmonton.

After Ruth McIntyre had a stroke in February, it affected her speech and memory, and left her with weakness on her left side as well as balance issues. The 49-year-old development manager also experienced extreme fatigue, leaving her too weak to travel to outpatient therapy.

“Having rehabilitation therapy at home is a godsend. I’m unable to drive; getting around is a challenge,” said McIntyre.

“They did an assessment, and then I had physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy … and a social worker helped me navigate the system and fill out forms and insurance claims. They do so much, it’s amazing. They helped me figure out what I needed to work on — and then we got to work.”

“I have had a number of patients express to me how impressed they are with the program,” said stroke specialist Dr. Tom Jeerakathil. “Rather than feeling they are ‘stepping into a void’ after discharge, they find themselves closely supported. The team helps them figure out how to return to home life while also providing intensive rehabilitation services so they can improve on a number of neurological problems.”

Colleen Taralson, acting manager of the stroke program in the Edmonton area, says the home rehabilitation program frees up acute care beds which, in turn, relieves pressure in local emergency departments.

“So often as nurses, we would look at mild to moderate stroke patients and say, ‘This patient does not need to be here’ — but where else do you send them to allow them the time to recover enough to function at home?” said Taralson.

“This program closes that gap. It’s a pathway that not only helps with patient flow, but allows people to be in the best possible place for their recovery.”

The Stroke Early Supported Discharge Program was piloted in 2009 with funding from the Alberta Provincial Stroke Strategy, now part of the Cardiovascular Health and Stroke Strategic Clinical Network. Strategic clinical networks are provincewide teams that bring together the experience and expertise of health care professionals, researchers, government, communities and patients and their families to improve our health care system.

 

 
Related Posts SliderRelated Stories
Why we never seem to have enough hospital beds in Canada
  Troy Media - By Jason Sutherland and Trafford Crump Canada has over 70,000 hospital beds and spends more than $47 billion a year on hospital care, yet accessing these beds when ...
Read More
29% OFF – Detect risk for heart attack, stroke for just $245 at Heartfit Clinic
Detect risk early and make changes to reverse heart disease     Over 40? How's your heart health? Heartfit Clinic can tell you using its Carotid IMT scan, which measures the thickness of ...
Read More
Top 3 reasons why making patients pay is a bad idea
  Troy Media - by Noralou Roos and Raisa Deber ‘User fees’ is an idea that surfaces regularly in Canadian health care debates to make the system more affordable, and it seems ...
Read More
Millrise Place’s Big Bike Challenge raises $10,000 for Alberta Heart and Stroke Foundation
Millrise Place employees armed with water guns joined the Alberta Heart and Stroke Challenge Bike, navigating in a 30-seat bike around a two kilometre course in Fish Creek Park in ...
Read More
The Breast Cancer Supportive Care Foundation’s (BCSCF) annual Fashion with Compassion will be taking place on September 24, 2011.   Held at the BMO Centre on the Stampede Grounds, patients, supporters, family ...
Read More
Home invasion puts N.E. Calgary man in hospital
Suspects fled with undisclosed amount of cash A northeast Calgary home invasion left two people injured, one of them seriously enough to hospital treatment. The Calgary Police Service says that on Thursday ...
Read More
Wildrose: Alberta hospital emergency rooms still broken
Health care crisis amidst huge board bonuses According to this year's Canadian Wait Time Alliance report card, there is an ongoing crisis in Alberta hospital emergency rooms. Wildrose Health Critic Heather Forsyth says ...
Read More
Northeast Calgary home invasion sends one to hospital
One victim stabbed during attack One person was hospitalized after an early afternoon home invasion in the northeast Calgary neighbourhood of Whitehorn on Sunday, July 8. The incident occurred at about 1 ...
Read More
Why we never seem to have enough hospital
29% OFF – Detect risk for heart attack,
Top 3 reasons why making patients pay is
Millrise Place’s Big Bike Challenge raises $10,000 for
Fashion with compassion event to support breast cancer
Home invasion puts N.E. Calgary man in hospital
Wildrose: Alberta hospital emergency rooms still broken
Northeast Calgary home invasion sends one to hospital

Tags: ,

Category: Health

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>