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The Quality of Life, Patient Satisfaction and Rehabilitation in Patients With a Low Energy Fracture-Part III of an Observational Study.

Puck C R van der VetJip Q KusenManuela Rohner-SpenglerBjoern-Christian LinkEgbert-Jan M M VerleisdonkMatthias KnobeChristoph HenzenLukas SchmidReto BabstFrank J P Beeres
Published in: Geriatric orthopaedic surgery & rehabilitation (2021)
At follow-up, QoL throughout all patients with a LEF was comparable to a normal population. Remarkably, though hip fracture patients seem to suffer from a clinically relevant loss of QoL, they received fewer PT sessions and performed fewer long-lasting home training than patients with a humerus fracture. Intensive, progressive rehabilitation with a high frequency of supervised training is recommended after hip fracture. The low frequency of PT sessions found in this study is unsatisfying. In hip fracture patients and in patients with a malleolar fracture, especially when aged over 75 years, more efforts are required to improve rehabilitation and subsequently QoL.
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