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Journal Article

Citation

Murphy LD, McMillan TM, Greenwood RJ, Brooks DN, Morris JR, Dunn G. Brain Inj. 1990; 4(1): 95-100.

Affiliation

Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1990, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2297604

Abstract

There is a growing awareness of deficits in service provision for severely head-injured patients. This study identifies areas in which patients fail to receive services by investigating the admission and transfer of such patients from eleven District Health Authorities in North London and the services offered by rehabilitation professionals in hospital and community. Sixty per cent of our sample were referred to Neurosurgical Units (NSUs) and later transferred to District General Hospitals (DGHs). Of these, 20% remained in DGHs without receiving NSU care, while 20% were treated at NSUs but were not referred to a local DGH. Assessment of rehabilitation services revealed that on average physiotherapists offered the greatest amount of therapy time to head-injured patients (3-4 hours) per week compared with other professionals and that this seemed to be a reflection of referral systems. Of the patients in our sample approximately 80% received physiotherapy, 30% received occupational therapy and less than 15% received speech therapy, social work or clinical psychology. It was concluded that severely head-injured patients fail to receive available services due to haphazard admission and transfer procedures, lack of referral to rehabilitation professionals and to the paucity of appropriate community care.


Language: en

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