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Rehabilitation for People With Critical Illness: Taking the Next Steps

Patricia J. Ohtake, Dale C. Strasser, Dale M. Needham
DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2012.92.12.1484 Published 1 December 2012
Patricia J. Ohtake
P.J. Ohtake, PT, PhD, is a PTJ Editorial Board member and co-editor of this special series. She is Associate Professor of Rehabilitation Science at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, Buffalo, New York.
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Dale C. Strasser
D.C. Strasser, MD, is a co-editor of this special series. He is Associate Professor in the Department of Reha bilitation Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
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Dale M. Needham
D.M. Needham, FCA, MD, PhD, is a co-editor of this special series. He is Associate Professor of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine and of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, and Medical Director of the Critical Care Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Program at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
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This article has a correction. Please see:

  • Ohtake PA, Strasser DC, Needham DM. Rehabilitation for people with critical illness: taking the next steps [editorial]. Phys Ther. 2012;92:1484–1488. - February 01, 2013

Due to the omission of several references, the original, published editorial has been replaced by this corrected version.

This special series on rehabilitation for people with critical illness (published in 2 issues—December 2012 and February 2013) presents recent advances in managing critical illness across the continuum of care, from the intensive care unit (ICU) to the community setting. The series also raises awareness of the essential role that physical therapists and rehabilitation and critical care professionals play in this growing patient population. The articles in this issue showcase important research conducted by established authors in the field, including physical therapists from across the United States and from Australia. In February 2013, articles will highlight innovative quality improvement initiatives, discuss key considerations for the profession, illustrate educational strategies, and describe novel cases.

The Current State

Improvements in managing the care of patients with critical illness have resulted in an increasing number of survivors.1 However, survivors of critical illness often experience “post–intensive care syndrome,”2 with long-lasting physical impairments, including muscle weakness and decreased functional ability3 and neuropsychiatric dysfunction.4 These consequences of critical illness often lead to decreased quality of life.5,6

Early intervention by physical therapists and other rehabilitation and critical care professionals is feasible and safe for patients in respiratory,7 medical,8 and surgical9 ICUs. Moreover, early rehabilitation in the ICU is associated with many short-term benefits, including decreased duration of mechanical ventilation, shorter ICU and hospital lengths of stay, shorter duration of delirium, and improved functional outcomes.8,10–12 Throughout a 1-year follow-up, early rehabilitation during the ICU stay also is associated with decreased hospital readmission and mortality rates.13

With this growing body of evidence, interest in early rehabilitation in the ICU is rapidly increasing, likely resulting in significant change from …

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Vol 92 Issue 12 Table of Contents
Physical Therapy: 92 (12)

Issue highlights

  • How the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) Develops Research Priorities and Supports Critical Care Research
  • Intensive Care Unit–Acquired Weakness
  • Quantifying Physical Activity Levels of Survivors of Intensive Care
  • Activity on the Ward After the Intensive Care Unit
  • An Exercise Prescription Approach to Rehabilitation for Survivors of Critical Illness
  • Clinical Utility of the Functional Status Score for the Intensive Care Unit (FSS-ICU) at a Long-Term Acute Care Hospital
  • Predictors of Mortality and Length of Stay in a Surgical Intensive Care Unit
  • Repeatability of the Six-Minute Walk Test and Relation to Physical Function in Critical Illness
  • Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation for Intensive Care Unit–Acquired Weakness Phase II Randomized Trial
  • The Activity and Cognitive Therapy in the Intensive Care Unit (ACT-ICU) Trial
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Rehabilitation for People With Critical Illness: Taking the Next Steps
Patricia J. Ohtake, Dale C. Strasser, Dale M. Needham
Physical Therapy Dec 2012, 92 (12) 1484-1488; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2012.92.12.1484

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Rehabilitation for People With Critical Illness: Taking the Next Steps
Patricia J. Ohtake, Dale C. Strasser, Dale M. Needham
Physical Therapy Dec 2012, 92 (12) 1484-1488; DOI: 10.2522/ptj.2012.92.12.1484
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Subjects

  • Acute Care

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