Everything You Need to Know About Rehabilitation Nursing For Strokes

A Simplified Guide To Rehabilitation Nursing For Strokes

Rehabilitation is a crucial part of stroke recovery, and rehabilitation nursing can be one of the best services to enlist in recovering from a stroke. This resource guide will cover everything you need to know about rehabilitation nursing for stroke recovery. From its main purpose and benefits, to the questions you need to ask before selecting a rehabilitation center, we’ve got you covered.

The Purpose of Rehabilitation Nurses

Rehabilitation nurses specialize in helping people with disabilities. They typically work at rehabilitation facilities, separate from hospitals where stroke patients receive primary care. They specialize in helping survivors with personal care issues as well as training patients on how to carry out the basic tasks of daily living.

These nurses help survivors manage common health problems, like diabetes and high blood pressure, that can lead stroke survivors to another stroke. They also educate survivors about routine health care, such as how to follow a medication schedule, how to care for the skin, how to move out of a bed and into a wheelchair.

The Benefits of Rehabilitation Nursing

Being “hit” by a stroke is often an unexpected and terrifying experience. Survivors and their families need help to understand the implications that a stroke causes for their life, roles, identity, functioning, and more. Survivors often need to reinterpret their life situation and their way of life and rehabilitation nurses can assist with that journey.

Rehabilitation Nursing provides holistic, comprehensive, and compassionate care for patients with life-limiting conditions. They help survivors overcome their newfound physical limitations and help their patients adapt to a lifestyle of managing injury, disability, and chronic illness.

They are there to help support adaptive capabilities as well as promote achievable independence. They also educate patients and help them with adjustments that support their health. In short, rehabilitation nurses strive to assist stroke survivors in regaining a meaningful life.

When You Need Rehabilitation Nursing

Before you or your loved one is discharged from the hospital, you should talk to doctors and discharge planners about rehabilitation. They can help you choose the services or programs that best fit you or the stroke survivor’s needs.

Nursing rehab programs can be found in many different settings. Your doctors will usually suggest the most rigorous program a stroke patient can handle. They will decide the right program for a patient can based on their age, degree of disability and overall health.

If you see benefit with assistance in reinterpreting the patient’s way of life, re-learning skills and making adjustments to you or your loved one’s health to prevent another stroke, then rehabilitation nursing services could be your answer. Just make sure that all involved parties are comfortable with the type of program you choose.

What Happens During Your Time With A Rehabilitation Nurse

A patient’s goals with rehabilitation nursing depend on the effects of the stroke, the patient’s capabilities before the stroke, and the stroke survivor’s interests and ambition.

In the hospital and in nursing facility rehabilitation programs, you or your loved one may spend several hours a day on rehabilitation activities. The program staff work together with the stroke patient and the family, setting a series of rehabilitation goals that you can all work together to achieve. It’s important that these goals are realistic and attainable and that all parties are in agreeance. Be sure to communicate any specific goals to the program staff so that everyone understands the planned road to recovery.

Some of the time in a rehabilitation program is spent re-learning skills such as walking and speaking. At other times, you or your loved one will be learning new ways to complete everyday activities, such as using one hand for tasks that would usually be expected to require two hands. It is important to re-learn and keep up everyday skills for continued recovery and eventual independence.

Inpatient And Outpatient Programs

Some stroke rehab programs are inpatient programs and others are outpatient programs. Inpatient programs admit patients to stay overnight, and will assign them rooms to live in during treatment. Outpatient programs provide treatment without requiring that patient’s stay overnight. Outpatient programs allow a stroke survivor who lives at home a full range of services by visiting a hospital outpatient department, outpatient rehabilitation facility, or hospital day program.

One major consideration with any ongoing outpatient program is the need for transportation. If you choose an outpatient program, make sure someone is available to drive the patient to and from the program or that a service is scheduled to pick them up.

Rehabilitation nursing programs can differ drastically. Some rehabilitation nursing program provide a complete range of rehabilitation services while others provide limited care. Be sure to hunt down specific information about those available to you and your situation.

Read the rest of this article on the Saebo blog here: http://www.saebo.com/simplified-guide-rehabilitation-nursing-strokes/


All content provided on this blog is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately. Reliance on any information provided by the Saebo website is solely at your own risk.