Literature DB >> 11641808

Community-care waiting list for persons with spinal cord injury.

S Vaidyanathan1, B M Soni, P Mansour, C A Glass, G Singh, J Bingley, J W Watt, P Sett.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To disseminate the concept of community care waiting lists for spinal cord injury (SCI) patients with particular reference to carer support for management of neuropathic bladder by a regime of intermittent catheterisation.
METHODOLOGY: The surgical waiting list focuses only on operative procedures, and ignores the wider requirements for ensuring satisfactory rehabilitation of people with spinal cord injury in the community. A community-care waiting list for individuals with spinal cord injury should include the following aspects of community care: (1) Home adaptation; (2) Provision of appropriate mobility needs (including wheelchair and cushion); (3) Equipment for comfortable living (including provision of hoist, pressure relieving mattress); (4) Psychological support for spinal cord injury patients and their partners; (5) Nursing home or residential care placement where appropriate; (6) Carer support for global management of complex needs associated with spinal cord injury (eg neuropathic bladder and bowel).
RESULTS: Whereas full physical adaptation of the home can wait for some time after discharge, carer support for intermittent catheterisation is required from the first day after discharge from a spinal unit. Lack of such support means that some SCI patients are discharged with long-term indwelling urinary catheters, even though clean intermittent catheterisation is known to be the safest regime for managing the neuropathic bladder. Therefore, the absence of a community care waiting list means that best practice cannot be achieved for some tetraplegic subjects.
CONCLUSION: We believe that a community care waiting list for bladder management will help to provide optimum care for neuropathic bladder and, hopefully, reduce the complications related to long-term indwelling catheters in spinal cord injury patients.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11641808     DOI: 10.1038/sj.sc.3101212

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Spinal Cord        ISSN: 1362-4393            Impact factor:   2.772


  4 in total

1.  Advancing primary and community care for persons with spinal cord injury: Key findings from a Canadian summit.

Authors:  James Milligan; Joseph Lee; Matt Smith; Lindsay Donaldson; Peter Athanasopoulos; Kent Bassett-Spiers; Jeremy Howcroft; Jennifer W Howcroft; Tara Jeji; Phalgun B Joshi; Upender Mehan; Vanessa Noonan
Journal:  J Spinal Cord Med       Date:  2018-12-17       Impact factor: 1.985

2.  The method of bladder drainage in spinal cord injury patients may influence the histological changes in the mucosa of neuropathic bladder - a hypothesis.

Authors:  Subramanian Vaidyanathan; Paul Mansour; Bakul M Soni; Gurpreet Singh; Pradipkumar Sett
Journal:  BMC Urol       Date:  2002-04-30       Impact factor: 2.264

3.  Infarction of middle third posterior cortex of kidney: a complication of extended pyelolithotomy, intra-operative electrohydraulic lithotripsy and extraction of calyceal stones under vision using stone basket and flexible cystoscope in a spinal cord injury patient - a case report.

Authors:  Subramanian Vaidyanathan; Peter L Hughes; Gurpreet Singh; Bakul M Soni
Journal:  Cases J       Date:  2009-01-28

4.  Invasive carcinoma of urinary bladder in a patient with a spinal cord injury with non-functioning Brindley sacral anterior root stimulator: a case report.

Authors:  Subramanian Vaidyanathan; Bakul M Soni; Paul Mansour; Gurpreet Singh; Peter L Hughes
Journal:  Cases J       Date:  2008-09-01
  4 in total

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