Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury

A traumatic hand injury can involve damage to a number of structures including skin, nerves, tendons, muscle bone, and soft tissue. Impairments such as pain or stiffness and loss of range of motion can last for many years and result in a moderate to extreme impact on a person’s day-to-day life. Work...

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Main Author: Gail A Kingston
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-09-01
Series:Rehabilitation Process and Outcome
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/1179572717734204
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spelling doaj-60f46fc05adb4b4495aa97a44db655d72020-11-25T03:09:18ZengSAGE PublishingRehabilitation Process and Outcome1179-57272017-09-01610.1177/1179572717734204Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand InjuryGail A Kingston0Occupational Therapy Department, College of Healthcare Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, AustraliaA traumatic hand injury can involve damage to a number of structures including skin, nerves, tendons, muscle bone, and soft tissue. Impairments such as pain or stiffness and loss of range of motion can last for many years and result in a moderate to extreme impact on a person’s day-to-day life. Work, leisure, financial security, and emotional well-being often most affected. This commentary provides an analysis of those factors that inhibit (barriers) and support (enablers) the provision of hand therapy rehabilitation in rural and remote areas. Providing a collaborative and flexible rehabilitation programme to rural and remote residents following a traumatic hand injury can be seen as a challenge due to issues such as a limited access to health care services. Established protocols that work in regional or metropolitan locations are unlikely to be effective and innovative and pragmatic strategies are required. The provision of a collaborative and flexible rehabilitation programme regardless of residential location is an important part of the therapist’s intervention plan.https://doi.org/10.1177/1179572717734204
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gail A Kingston
spellingShingle Gail A Kingston
Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
Rehabilitation Process and Outcome
author_facet Gail A Kingston
author_sort Gail A Kingston
title Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
title_short Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
title_full Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
title_fullStr Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
title_full_unstemmed Commentary: Rehabilitation for Rural and Remote Residents Following a Traumatic Hand Injury
title_sort commentary: rehabilitation for rural and remote residents following a traumatic hand injury
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Rehabilitation Process and Outcome
issn 1179-5727
publishDate 2017-09-01
description A traumatic hand injury can involve damage to a number of structures including skin, nerves, tendons, muscle bone, and soft tissue. Impairments such as pain or stiffness and loss of range of motion can last for many years and result in a moderate to extreme impact on a person’s day-to-day life. Work, leisure, financial security, and emotional well-being often most affected. This commentary provides an analysis of those factors that inhibit (barriers) and support (enablers) the provision of hand therapy rehabilitation in rural and remote areas. Providing a collaborative and flexible rehabilitation programme to rural and remote residents following a traumatic hand injury can be seen as a challenge due to issues such as a limited access to health care services. Established protocols that work in regional or metropolitan locations are unlikely to be effective and innovative and pragmatic strategies are required. The provision of a collaborative and flexible rehabilitation programme regardless of residential location is an important part of the therapist’s intervention plan.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/1179572717734204
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