Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape

Introduction: Community integration is an important outcome of rehabilitation, because the ultimate focus of rehabilitation is to enable people to participate in their life roles. Aim: To determine community integration scores achieved by adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient re...

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Main Authors: Dietlind Gretschel, Surona Visagie, Gakeemah Inglis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2017-10-01
Series:South African Journal of Physiotherapy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/361
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spelling doaj-933a8595c6b045df8aacff664dc2465b2020-11-24T23:55:02ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Physiotherapy0379-61752410-82192017-10-01731e1e710.4102/sajp.v73i1.361325Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western CapeDietlind Gretschel0Surona Visagie1Gakeemah Inglis2Centre of Rehabilitation Studies, Stellenbosch UniversityCentre of Rehabilitation Studies, Stellenbosch UniversityPhysiotherapy Division, Faculty of Health Sciences, Stellenbosch UniversityIntroduction: Community integration is an important outcome of rehabilitation, because the ultimate focus of rehabilitation is to enable people to participate in their life roles. Aim: To determine community integration scores achieved by adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation centre in the Western Cape Province. Method: Fifty-nine individuals participated in this cross-sectional study. Community integration was determined using the Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI). Descriptive analysis of age, gender, medical diagnosis and RNLI scores was performed. Kruskal–Wallis test and t-tests were used to determine whether there exists any relationship between age, gender, medical diagnosis and RNLI scores (p < 0.05). Results: Participants’ mean age was 45 (± 15.9) years. Of the study participants, 54% were women. The most common diagnosis was stroke (41%), followed by spinal cord injury (30%). The mean overall RNLI score was 66.3 (± 25.5). Persons with brain trauma (stroke or head injury) had a mean of 60.9 (±20.3); those with spinal cord injury had a mean of 75.2 (± 25.8) and those with peripheral impairments had a mean of 65.5 (± 30.5). The RNLI domains ‘personal relationships’ 73.45 (± 31.6) and ‘presentation of self’ 72.13 (± 35.4) recorded the highest mean scores. The domain ‘work or meaningful activities’ had the lowest mean score 52.54 (± 35.3). ‘Community mobility’ (59.9; ± 34.6) and ‘recreation’ (57.3; ± 37.2) also had mean scores below 60. No statistically significant relationships were found between age, gender and medical diagnosis and RNLI scores. Conclusion: The relatively low mean scores indicate that participants achieved poor community reintegration.https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/361community integrationadults with disabilitiesin-patient rehabilitationReintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dietlind Gretschel
Surona Visagie
Gakeemah Inglis
spellingShingle Dietlind Gretschel
Surona Visagie
Gakeemah Inglis
Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
South African Journal of Physiotherapy
community integration
adults with disabilities
in-patient rehabilitation
Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI)
author_facet Dietlind Gretschel
Surona Visagie
Gakeemah Inglis
author_sort Dietlind Gretschel
title Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
title_short Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
title_full Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
title_fullStr Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the Western Cape
title_sort community integration of adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation unit in the western cape
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Physiotherapy
issn 0379-6175
2410-8219
publishDate 2017-10-01
description Introduction: Community integration is an important outcome of rehabilitation, because the ultimate focus of rehabilitation is to enable people to participate in their life roles. Aim: To determine community integration scores achieved by adults with disabilities post discharge from an in-patient rehabilitation centre in the Western Cape Province. Method: Fifty-nine individuals participated in this cross-sectional study. Community integration was determined using the Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI). Descriptive analysis of age, gender, medical diagnosis and RNLI scores was performed. Kruskal–Wallis test and t-tests were used to determine whether there exists any relationship between age, gender, medical diagnosis and RNLI scores (p < 0.05). Results: Participants’ mean age was 45 (± 15.9) years. Of the study participants, 54% were women. The most common diagnosis was stroke (41%), followed by spinal cord injury (30%). The mean overall RNLI score was 66.3 (± 25.5). Persons with brain trauma (stroke or head injury) had a mean of 60.9 (±20.3); those with spinal cord injury had a mean of 75.2 (± 25.8) and those with peripheral impairments had a mean of 65.5 (± 30.5). The RNLI domains ‘personal relationships’ 73.45 (± 31.6) and ‘presentation of self’ 72.13 (± 35.4) recorded the highest mean scores. The domain ‘work or meaningful activities’ had the lowest mean score 52.54 (± 35.3). ‘Community mobility’ (59.9; ± 34.6) and ‘recreation’ (57.3; ± 37.2) also had mean scores below 60. No statistically significant relationships were found between age, gender and medical diagnosis and RNLI scores. Conclusion: The relatively low mean scores indicate that participants achieved poor community reintegration.
topic community integration
adults with disabilities
in-patient rehabilitation
Reintegration to Normal Living Index (RNLI)
url https://sajp.co.za/index.php/sajp/article/view/361
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