Spinal cord injury rehabilitation and pressure ulcer prevention after the 2005 South Asian Earthquake: a CBR case study from Pakistan.
Jawad Ahmed ChishtieFarrukh ChishtieKaren YoshidaRobert BaloghPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation (2018)
The decrease in pressure ulcer prevalence over the last year in persons with spinal cord injury highlights the strengths of the community-based rehabilitation approach, particularly preventive education in geographically challenging and highly resource constrained settings. The research also begins to fill a critical gap in the present literature as most research is limited to hospital based interventions from the first year of the 2005 earthquake. Implications for Rehabilitation Prevention education for targeting pressure ulcers can be effective in reducing incidence of this important complication in persons with spinal cord injury. Community-based rehabilitation approaches can prove beneficial in post-disaster settings, especially in resource constrained settings and difficult hilly terrain. Rehabilitation programs should consider nutrition interventions to reduce multiple pressure ulcers, especially in lower middle income countries.