| Literature DB >> 29615112 |
J Jagnoor1,2, C Lukaszyk3, A Christou3,4, T Potokar5, S Chamania6, R Ivers3,7,8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe the capacity of the Indian healthcare system in providing appropriate and effective burns treatment and rehabilitation services.Entities:
Keywords: Burns care; Burns rehabilitation; Health professionals; Health services; Health systems; India
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29615112 PMCID: PMC5883359 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-018-3314-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Hospital sites selected for stakeholder consultations and characteristics of health professionals involved
| Site | Capacity | Patient flow | Resources with burn care and rehabilitation team | Health professionals involved in consultations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site A, Public Hospital, New Delhi | 65 bedded burns unit | 5800 patients admitted each year, with 55% surviving and nearly 100% loss to follow up post 3 weeks of discharge, with population base of up-to 500 km | Team of 20 consultants (including residents), 15 nurses, 2 physio-therapists, 7 ward attendants | Professor; head of the department, male |
| Site B, Public Hospital, New Delhi | 50 bedded burns unit | 4300 patients admitted each year, with nearly 50% surviving. Loss to follow up is high and population base of up-to 500 km | Team of 17 consultants, 12 nurses, 5 ward attendants, 1 dietician. Physiotherapists, psychiatrist and social workers are consulted at on call basis | Professor; head of the department, male |
| Site C, Private Hospital, Gujarat | 4 bedded unit | 12–16 patients admitted each year. 90% surviving all patients followed up till best possible rehabilitation | Team of 2 consultants, 4 nurses, 2 ward attendants, 1 physiotherapist, 1 dietician and an on-call social worker | Lead clinician, male |
| Site D, Public Hospital and educational institute, Gujarat | 24 bedded burns unit and 7 beds in general surgery unit | 4800 patients admitted, numbers for OPD are uncertain as burns patients are looked at general surgery | Team of 7 consultants and 15 nursing staff, ward attendants 3. Physiotherapy department consulted on need basis | Senior resident, general surgery, male |
| Site E, Private Hospital, Mumbai | 10 bedded unit | 300 admission each year. No regular OPD | Team of 4 consultants, 25 nurses and brothers, 1 physiotherapist, 1 psychologist, 1 dietician, 2 social worker | Psychologist, female |
| Site F, Charitable Hospital, Indore | 12 bedded unit | 250 admission every year and an OPD of 750 patients | Team of 5 consultant staff, 9 nurses, 7 paramedical staff, 1 dietician, 1 physiotherapist, 1 psychologist, 1 occupational therapist | Burns surgeon, female |
| Site G, Public Hospital, Mumbai | 8 bedded burns unit, and 4 beds in general surgery unit | 700 admitted patients, usual practice is for male patients to be sent to general surgery and OPD of 1000 patients | Team of 3 doctors, 3 nurses, 1 physiotherapist, 1 social worker, 2 occupational therapists and 1 dietician are consulted on referral basis | Small group discussion with the burns treatment team |
Topic guide used for health professional consultation
| 1. | Does your facility/professional group have an overarching rehabilitation plan/strategy? If yes, please briefly describe |
| 2. | How is it determined in which practice setting (inpatient, outpatient, at home) a patient will receive rehabilitation care? e.g. admission criteria |
| 3. | What objective assessment of rehabilitation potential occurs before a patient is accepted into the service? e.g. physician assessment, use of tools like FIM, therapist assessment |
| 4. | What are the enablers and/or barriers associated with patient flow across the continuum of care? What are the enablers and/or barriers specifically associated with rehabilitation care at admission, whilst in hospital, or post discharge? e.g. workforce shortages, defined clinical pathways, patient resource limitations |
| 5. | Are there objective measures regarding how much rehabilitation a patient should receive, or when to stop providing care? e.g. discharge criteria, defined funding eligibility limits |
| 6. | Approximately what proportion of the health system’s rehabilitation care occurs in inpatient vs. outpatient vs. at home? |
| 7. | Who makes up the rehabilitation team at your hospital? e.g. dietician, physiotherapist, psychologist |
| 8. | Are there usual patterns of treatment frequency, intensity, and duration? If so, can you describe these? e.g. a patient in inpatient rehabilitation would be seen twice daily for an hour each until able to be seen in outpatient |
| 9. | How does a patient move from one practice setting to another, for example from inpatient to outpatient? Is this based on functional measures, based on funding or based on access? |
| 10. | What are the key rehabilitation issues you identify in burns survivors? This can range from prevention and first aid through to rehabilitation |
Key themes identified by health professionals with illustrative quotes
| Theme | Quote |
|---|---|
|
| “ |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
| “ |