Health-related quality of life and prosthesis use among patients amputated due to peripheral arterial disease - a one-year follow-up.
Eva TorbjörnssonCarin OttossonLennart BoströmLena BlomgrenJonas MalmstedtAnn-Mari FagerdahlPublished in: Disability and rehabilitation (2020)
Learning how to use, not exclusively to walk with, a prosthesis after an amputation is important for the patients' HRQoL. At follow-up, patients using their prosthesis to walk or to move to a wheelchair, showed an improved HRQoL compared to baseline.IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION Walking ability with a prosthesis is important for the patient's perceived HRQoL after an amputation.Rehabilitation of amputees should focus on independence and movability and not only on walking ability.Wider use of prescribing prostheses after an amputation also to those predicted as non-walkers, may increase the number of patients with independence and improved HRQoL.When using their prosthesis for independent movement, patients who were otherwise unable to walk due to their amputation were able to achieve HRQoL comparable to walking amputees.